RELATED APPLICATIONS
TECHNICAL FIELD
[0002] The present disclosure relates generally to medical appliances, material, and structures
comprising serially deposited fibers. These fibers may comprise polymeric fibers that
may be deposited by rotational spinning and/or electrospinning, for example. The disclosure
further relates to methods and processes for configuring the properties of the fibers
and/or manufacture of structures fully or partially comprised of such fibers. In some
embodiments, the polymeric fibers are used in implantable devices.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0003] The embodiments disclosed herein will become more fully apparent from the following
description and appended statements, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
These drawings depict only typical embodiments, which will be described with additional
specificity and detail through use of the accompanying figures in which:
Figure 1A is a perspective view of a membrane disposed on a mandrel.
Figure 1B is a perspective view of the membrane of Figure 1A being removed from the
mandrel.
Figure 1C is a perspective view of the membrane of Figure 1A being stretched.
Figure 2A is a Scanning Electron Micrograph (SEM) (950X magnification) of a portion
of an axially/longitudinally stretched rotational spun tube.
Figure 2B is an SEM (950X magnification) of a portion of a radially stretched rotational
spun tube.
Figure 3A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a first portion of a rotational spun
fiber mat.
Figure 3B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 3A.
Figure 3C is an SEM (170X magnification) of a second portion of the rotational spun
fiber mat of Figure 3A.
Figure 3D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 3C.
Figure 4A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a first portion of a rotational spun
fiber mat.
Figure 4B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 4A.
Figure 4C is an SEM (170X magnification) of a second portion of the rotational spun
fiber mat of Figure 4A.
Figure 4D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 4C.
Figure 5A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a first portion of a rotational spun
fiber mat.
Figure 5B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 5A.
Figure 5C is an SEM (170X magnification) of a second portion of the rotational spun
fiber mat of Figure 5A.
Figure 5D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 5C.
Figure 6A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a first portion of a rotational spun
fiber mat.
Figure 6B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 6A.
Figure 6C is an SEM (170X magnification) of a second portion of the rotational spun
fiber mat of Figure 6A.
Figure 6D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 6C.
Figure 7A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a first portion of a rotational spun
fiber mat.
Figure 7B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 7A.
Figure 7C is an SEM (170X magnification) of a second portion of the rotational spun
fiber mat of Figure 7A.
Figure 7D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the portion of the rotational spun fiber
mat of Figure 7C.
Figure 8A is a graph plotting the percent stretch against the wall thickness decrease
for materials stretched at various temperatures.
Figure 8B is a graph plotting the percent stretch against the percent decrease in
wall thickness for materials stretched at various temperatures.
Figure 9A is a graph showing the stress/strain ratios for various stretched and control
grafts.
Figure 9B is a graph showing the average stress at max load, plotted against the
stretch ratio of each sample graft, for the grafts plotted in Figure 9A.
Figure 10A is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for various rotational spun
samples stretched at 250° C.
Figure 10B is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for various rotational spun
samples stretched at 370° C.
Figure 10C is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for various rotational spun
samples stretched at 385° C.
Figure 10D is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for the materials of Figures
10A-10C, plotting on the same axes.
Figure 11A is a perspective view of a membrane disposed on a mandrel.
Figure 11B is a perspective view of the membrane of Figure 11A being removed from
the mandrel.
Figure 11C is a perspective view of the membrane of Figure 11A being compressed onto
the mandrel.
Figure 12A is a perspective view of a corrugated tube in a first configuration.
Figure 12B is a perspective view of the corrugated tube of Figure 12A in a second
configuration.
Figure 12C is a perspective view of the corrugated tube of Figure 12A in a third
configuration.
Figure 12D is a perspective view of the corrugated tube of Figure 12A in a fourth
configuration.
Figure 13A is an SEM (170X magnification) of a rotational spun mat heat-set in a
corrugated geometry.
Figure 13B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the rotational spun mat of Figure 13A.
Figure 14A is a front view of a tube with reinforcing rings.
Figure 14B is a front view of the tube of Figure 14A with a layer disposed over the
rings.
Figure 15A is a photograph of a densified portion of a first rotational spun tube.
Figure 15B is a photograph of a densified portion of a second rotational spun tube.
Figure 15C is a backlit photograph of the densified portion of the rotational spun
tube of Figure 15B.
Figure 16A is an SEM (25X magnification) of the densified portion of the rotational
spun tube of Figures 15B and 15C.
Figure 16B is an SEM (950X magnification) of the densified portion of the rotational
spun tube of Figure 16A.
Figure 16C is an SEM (110X magnification) of the rotational spun tube of Figures
15B and 15C, showing a densified portion and a non-densified portion.
Figure 16D is an SEM (950X magnification) of the rotational spun tube of Figures
15B and 15C, showing a partially densified portion.
Figure 17A is an SEM (100X magnification) of a rotational spun mat with a propylene
suture disposed therein.
Figure 17B is an SEM (100X magnification) of a commercially available expanded PTFE
(ePTFE) vascular graft with a propylene suture disposed therein.
Figure 17C is an SEM (100X magnification) of a rotational spun mat with a silk suture
disposed therein.
Figure 17D is an SEM (100X magnification) of a commercially available ePTFE vascular
graft with a silk suture disposed therein.
Figure 18 is a Scanning Electron Micrograph (SEM) at 950X magnification of a first
sample of a serially deposited fiber mat, exhibiting generally random fiber disposition.
Figure 19 is an SEM at 950X magnification of a second sample of a serially deposited
fiber mat, exhibiting generally aligned fiber disposition.
Figure 20 is the SEM of the serially deposited fiber mat of Figure 18, with lines
indicating fiber axes and widths.
Figure 21 is a chart summarizing the relationship of the angle, in degrees, of intersecting,
branching, or bundled fibers and general fiber alignment of a serially deposited fiber
mat.
Figure 22 is an SEM at 950X magnification of a serially deposited fiber mat which
has been partially to fully densified.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0004] Various structures, including medical appliances and related components, may comprise
serially deposited fibers. Serially deposited fibers may comprise polymeric fibers,
ceramic fibers, and/or other materials. In some embodiments, soft or fluidic materials
are deposited in elongate strands or fibers on a collector or substrate. After these
fibers are deposited, the shape or structure of the mat or lattice of fibers may be
set by, for example, hardening of the material of the fibers. For example, polymeric
materials may be deposited as fibers in the form of a polymeric dispersion and then
sintered to remove the solvent component of the dispersion and to set the structure
of the polymeric fibers. Similarly, polymeric materials may be serially deposited
as fibers while the material is in a heated or molten state. Cooling of the collected
fibers may tend to set the structure of the mat or lattice of fibers. The fibers comprising
these mats or lattices may generally be on a micro scale (fibers which are between
one micron and one millimeter in diameter) and/or generally on a nano scale (fibers
which are smaller than one micron in diameter).
[0005] Serially deposited fiber mats or lattices refer to structures composed at least partially
of fibers successively deposited on a collector, on a substrate, on a base material,
and/or on previously deposited fibers. In some instances the fibers may be randomly
disposed, while in other embodiments the alignment or orientation of the fibers may
be somewhat controlled or follow a general trend or pattern. Regardless of any pattern
or degree of fiber alignment, because the fibers are deposited on the collector, substrate,
base material, and/or previously deposited fibers, the fibers are not woven, but rather
serially deposited. Because such fibers are configured to create a variety of structures,
as used herein, the terms "mat" and "lattice" are intended to be broadly construed
as referring to any such structure, including tubes, spheres, sheets, and so on. Furthermore,
the term "membrane" as used herein refers to any structure comprising serially deposited
fibers having a thickness which is smaller than at least one other dimension of the
membrane. Examples of membranes include, but are not limited to, serially deposited
fiber mats or lattices forming sheets, strips, tubes, spheres, covers, layers, and
so forth.
[0006] Rotational spinning is one example of how a material may be serially deposited as
fibers. One embodiment of a rotational spinning process comprises loading a polymer
solution or dispersion into a cup or spinneret configured with orifices on the outside
circumference of the spinneret. The spinneret is then rotated, causing (through a
combination of centrifugal and hydrostatic forces, for example) the flowable material
within the spinneret to be expelled from the orifices. The material may then form
a "jet" or "stream" extending from the orifice, with drag forces tending to cause
the stream of material to elongate into a small diameter fiber. The fibers may then
be deposited on a collection apparatus, a substrate, or other fibers. Once collected,
the fibers may be dried, cooled, sintered, or otherwise processed to set the structure
or otherwise harden the fiber mat. For example, polymeric fibers rotational spun from
a dispersion may be sintered to remove solvents, fiberizing agents, or other materials
as well as to set the structure of the mat. In one embodiment, for instance, an aqueous
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) dispersion may be mixed with polyethylene oxide (PEO)
(as a fiberizing agent) and water (as a solvent for the PEO), and the mixture rotational
spun. Sintering by heating the collected fibers may set the PTFE structure, evaporate
off the water, and sublimate the PEO. Exemplary methods and systems for rotational
spinning can be found in
U.S. Patent Application No. 13/742,025, filed on January 15, 2013, and titled "Rotational Spun Material Covered Medical Appliances and Methods of Manufacture,"
which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
[0007] Electrospinning is another embodiment of how a material may be serially deposited
as fibers. One embodiment of an electrospinning process comprises loading a polymer
solution or dispersion into a syringe coupled to a syringe pump. The material is forced
out of the syringe by the pump in the presence of an electric field. The material
forced from the syringe may elongate into fibers that are then deposited on a grounded
collection apparatus, such as a collector or substrate. The system may be configured
such that the material forced from the syringe is electrostatically charged, and thus
attracted to the grounded collection apparatus. As with rotational spinning, once
collected, the fibers may be dried, cooled, sintered, or otherwise processed to set
the structure or otherwise harden the fiber mat. For example, polymeric fibers electrospun
from a dispersion may be sintered to remove solvents, fiberizing agents, or other
materials as well as to set the structure of the mat. As in rotational spinning, one
embodiment of electrospinning comprises electrospinning an aqueous PTFE dispersion
mixed with PEO and water (as a solvent for the PEO). Sintering by heating the collected
fibers may set the PTFE structure, evaporate off the water, and sublimate the PEO.
Exemplary methods and systems for electrospinning medical devices can be found in
U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/703,037, filed on September 19, 2012, and titled "Electrospun Material Covered Medical Appliances and Methods of Manufacture,"
and
U.S. Patent Application No. 13/360,444, filed on January 27, 2012, and titled "Electrospun PTFE Coated Stent and Method of Use," both of which are
hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
[0008] Rotational spinning and/or electrospinning may be utilized to create a variety of
materials or structures comprising serially deposited fibers. The microstructure or
nanostructure of such materials, as well as the porosity, permeability, material composition,
rigidity, fiber alignment, and so forth, may be controlled or configured to promote
biocompatibility or influence interactions between the material and cells or other
biologic material. A variety of materials may be serially deposited through processes
such as rotational spinning and electrospinning, for example, polymers, ceramics,
metals, materials which may be melt-processed, or any other material having a soft
or liquid form. A variety of materials may be serially deposited through rotational
spinning or electrospinning while the material is in a solution, dispersion, molten
or semi-molten form, and so forth. The present disclosure may be applicable to any
material discussed herein being serially deposited as fibers onto any substrate or
in any geometry discussed herein. Thus, examples of particular materials or structures
given herein may be analogously applied to other materials and/or structures.
[0009] Rotational spinning, electrospinning, or other analogous processes may be used to
create serially deposited fiber mats as disclosed herein. Throughout this disclosure,
examples may be given of serially deposited fiber mats generally, or the examples
may specify the process (such as rotational spinning or electrospinning) utilized
to create the serially deposited fiber mat. It is within the scope of this disclosure
to analogously apply any process for creating serially deposited fibers to any disclosure
or example below, regardless of whether the disclosure specifically indicates a particular
mat was formed according to a particular process.
[0010] Serially deposited fiber mats or lattices may be further processed after the fibers
are deposited. For example, the fiber mat or lattice may subsequently be deformed,
work-hardened, shape-set in a particular geometry, or otherwise processed. In one
example, serially deposited structures may be stretched in one or more directions,
in some instances while the mat is at an elevated temperature, such as when the material
of the fibers is at its crystalline melt temperature. In some examples, stretching
a fiber mat may tend to alter the degree to which fibers within the mat are aligned.
A fiber mat may further be densified by heating and compressing portions of the mat.
Various methods and systems for processing serially deposited fiber structures can
be found in
U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/780,646, filed on March 13, 2013, and titled "Serially Deposited Fiber Materials and Associated Methods," which is
hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
[0011] Serially deposited fibers may be formed or configured with various characteristics.
Various properties of a fiber mat or lattice, such as fiber size, pore size, permeability,
fiber alignment, density, and so forth may be controlled during initial fabrication
of the mat, post-processing, or both. It is within the scope of this disclosure to
create serially deposited fiber mats as described below through any combination of
fabrication steps and/or post-processing steps. For example, stretching a fiber mat
after deposition (post-processing) and serially depositing a fiber mat onto a spinning
mandrel or in the presence of electric fields or air currents to control deposition
(fabrication steps) may both be used to control the degree to which fibers of a mat
tend to be aligned. Any combination of any of these processes may be utilized to create
a fiber mat with the characteristics described below. Similarly, any other fabrication
or post-processing steps may be combined or utilized to control or affect other properties
of a fiber mat.
[0012] Various medical appliances may comprise one or more layers of serially deposited
fibers. For example, stent covers, stent grafts, grafts, patches, balloons, and other
medical appliances may comprise one or more serially deposited fiber layers. In some
embodiments, one or more serially deposited fiber layers may be present in a multilayered
construct. Various layers may be configured with various properties. For example,
a stent graft may be configured with one or more generally porous layers and one or
more generally impermeable layers. In one embodiment, a porous layer may be configured
to allow tissue growth on or into the layer, while an impermeable layer resists tissue
growth and/or fluid passage across the layer.
[0013] Medical appliances of various constructs and configurations are within the scope
of this disclosure. For example, a stent graft may be configured with an outer layer
configured to permit tissue ingrowth into the outer layer. Such an outer layer may
comprise serially deposited fibers having sufficient porosity or permeability to interact
with biologic tissue to allow tissue growth on or in the outer layer. Without being
bound by theory, an outer layer configured to permit tissue ingrowth may promote healing
at the boundary between the outer layer and biologic tissue (i.e., a body lumen);
may tend to anchor the stent graft upon implantation, reducing migration (through
interaction of tissue and the outer layer); and may otherwise interact with biologic
structures.
[0014] Similarly, a stent graft may be configured with an inner layer configured to allow
tissue attachment or ingrowth along the inside diameter of a stent graft or other
construct. Such a layer may be sufficiently porous to allow tissue (i.e., collagen,
endothelial cells, and so forth) to attach to the inside diameter of a medical device.
In some embodiments, the presence of endothelial cells on the inside diameter of a
stent graft may facilitate laminar flow through the stent graft and otherwise promote
healing.
[0015] Still further, constructs within the scope of this disclosure may further comprise
one or more impermeable layers. Such layers may be configured to resist tissue growth
into or through the layer and/or resist fluid passage across the layer (for example,
blood flow across the layer). In some embodiments, a construct may be formed with
more porous layers on one or both of the outside and inside diameters of a tubular
medical appliance with an impermeable layer disposed between the inside and outside
diameters. Impermeable layers may be configured to provide mechanical properties (e.g.,
strength, resistance to creep) to the construct while also creating a biologic impermeable
zone.
[0016] In addition to constructs having impermeable layers disposed between more porous
layers, constructs wherein an impermeable layer is disposed on an outside or inside
surface are also within the scope of this disclosure. For example, a stent graft having
a generally porous outside surface and an impermeable inside surface is within the
scope of this disclosure. Such an appliance may be configured to promote tissue interaction
and healing at an interface between the outside of the appliance and the body lumen,
while resisting tissue growth on the inside surface of the stent graft. Such a design
may allow for maximum tissue growth from the lumen into the outside layer of the stent
graft (to provide maximum migration resistance) while still maintaining an impermeable
layer to prevent blood leakage across the stent graft.
[0017] Impermeable layers may comprise layers of serially deposited fibers having low porosities
and/or densified serially deposited fibers as well as layers or coatings other than
serially deposited fibers (e.g., wrapped layers, spray coats, dipped coats, and so
forth). Constructs comprising any combination of serially deposited layers and any
combination of non-serially deposited layers are within the scope of this disclosure.
[0018] Serially deposited fiber mats may be configured with a variety of characteristics
which may be related to the material properties of the mat. For example, as indicated
above, a serially deposited fiber mat which exhibits fiber alignment may exhibit different
properties (e.g., tensile strength) in the direction of fiber alignment. Characteristics
such as fiber size and fiber density may affect the porosity of a fiber mat or the
degree to which the mat is permeable to fluid passage. Further, such characteristics
may influence the degree to which a mat is susceptible to ingrowth of tissue (into
or through the mat) when the mat is implanted in a body. The disclosure below describes
various characteristics of serially deposited fiber mats. The characteristics described
below may be present in a serially deposited fiber mat produced by a serial depositing
method and may apply to mats of any composition (polymeric, ceramic, etc.). Further,
the characteristics and properties described below are not mutually exclusive. In
other words, a fiber mat having a particular porosity or fiber diameter as disclosed
below may also have a particular fiber alignment or any other characteristic as described
below.
[0019] The components of the embodiments, as generally described and illustrated in the
figures herein, could be arranged and designed in a variety of configurations. Thus,
the following more detailed description of various embodiments, as represented in
the figures, is not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure, but is merely representative
of various embodiments. While the various aspects of the embodiments are presented
in drawings, the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale unless specifically indicated.
[0020] The phrases "connected to," "coupled to," and "in communication with" refer to any
form of interaction between two or more entities, including mechanical, electrical,
magnetic, electromagnetic, fluidic, and thermal interaction. Two components may be
coupled to each other even though they are not in direct contact with each other.
For example, two components may be coupled to each other through an intermediate component.
[0021] As used herein, references to heating a material "at" a particular temperature indicate
that the material has been disposed within an environment which is at the target temperature.
For example, placement of a material sample in an oven, the interior of the oven being
set at a particular temperature, would constitute heating the material at that particular
temperature. While disposed in a heated environment, the material may, but does not
necessarily, reach the temperature of the environment.
[0022] Additionally, the term "about," as used herein in connection with temperature, is
meant to indicate a range of ± 5°C around the given value. The term "about" used in
connection with quantities or values indicates a range of ± 5% around the value.
1. Heat and Stretch Processing of Serially Deposited Fiber Mats
[0023] Figures 1A-1C schematically illustrate various steps of how a mat or lattice of
serially deposited fibers may be processed by heating and/or stretching the mat or
lattice. In the illustrated embodiments the mat of serially deposited fibers comprises
a tubular membrane. In other embodiments the mat comprises a membrane in the form
of a sheet, a sphere, a strip, or any other geometry. Additionally, any material which
can be serially deposited as fibers may be processed as described in connection with
these figures.
[0024] Figure 1A is a perspective view of a membrane 110 disposed on a mandrel 120. In
some embodiments the membrane 110 comprises a mat of sintered polymeric fibers. For
example, a polymer dispersion such as a PTFE dispersion may be deposited on the mandrel
120 through rotational spinning or electrospinning. In the illustrated embodiment,
the membrane 110 extends between a first end 111 and a second end 112.
[0025] Figure 1B is a perspective view of the membrane 110 being removed from the mandrel
120. This may be done, for example, after the membrane 110 is serially deposited as
fibers and sintered or otherwise structurally set. The membrane 110 may be removed
by peeling the membrane 110 back off the mandrel 120, as shown in Figure 1B, or by
any other process, including slipping the membrane 110 off the mandrel 120 without
folding it back.
[0026] The membrane 110 may then be heated at a particular temperature prior to further
processing of the membrane 110. Temperatures at which materials may be heated prior
to processing may vary depending on the material and depending on the desired characteristics
of the material after processing. For example, a polymeric membrane may show more
or less fiber alignment after processing depending on various factors, such as the
temperature at which the materials are heated. In some instances the membrane 110
may be heated at a temperature at or above the crystalline melt point of the material
comprising the membrane 110, though it is not necessary to heat the material as high
as the crystalline melt temperature to stretch process the material.
[0027] In the case of polymeric materials which are sintered, the step of heating the membrane
110 may be performed as a separate and distinct step from sintering the membrane 110,
or may be done as the same step. For example, it is within the scope of this disclosure
to process a membrane 110 (as described in connection with Figure 1C and other disclosure
below) directly after sintering the membrane 110, while the membrane is at an elevated
temperature due to the sintering process. It is likewise within the scope of this
disclosure to obtain a previously sintered membrane 110 which may have been previously
cooled to ambient temperature, then heat the membrane 110 as part of a heating and
stretching process.
[0028] Figure 1C is a perspective view of the membrane 110 being processed by stretching
the membrane 110. Specifically, as shown by the arrows near the first 111 and second
112 ends of the membrane 110, in the illustrated embodiment, the membrane 110 is being
stretched in the axial/longitudinal direction of the tube that forms the membrane
110. The membrane 110 may be so stretched by applying forces (for example in the direction
of the arrows) to the membrane 110. Stretching the membrane 110 in the radial direction
(or stretching it to increase the diameter of the tube) and stretching the membrane
110 in any other direction are also within the scope of this disclosure. Membranes
or any other mat or lattice of serially deposited fibers may be stretched in any direction
as part of a heating and stretching process. Further, it is within the scope of this
disclosure to stretch a membrane in multiple directions, either simultaneously or
as part of separate steps. For example, the membrane 110 of Figure 1C may be stretched
both axially and radially after the membrane 110 is initially heated, or the membrane
may be stretched in these or other directions as part of distinct and separate steps.
Additionally, the membrane 110 may be heated multiple times during such a process.
[0029] Various methods, modes, mechanisms, and processes may be utilized to apply forces
to stretch materials. For example, force may be applied through mechanical, fluidic,
electro-magnetic, gravitational, and/or other mechanism or modes. In embodiments wherein
force is applied through fluidic interaction, a pressurized gas or liquid could be
used to generate the force while the material is at an elevated temperature. The fluid
may be stagnant or recirculating. Further, the fluid may be used to heat and/or cool
the material. For example, the liquid may be used to rapidly cool the material, locking
the microstructure and geometry.
[0030] The membrane 110 may be held in a stretched position while the membrane 110 cools.
For example, a membrane 110 may be heated at an elevated temperature prior to stretching,
stretched while the membrane 110 is at an elevated temperature, then held in the stretched
position while the membrane 110 cools to an ambient temperature. Depending on the
process, when the membrane 110 is stretched, it may be at a temperature lower than
the temperature at which it was heated, and it may or may not cool completely to the
ambient temperature while the position is held.
[0031] Processing a mat or lattice of serially deposited fibers as described in connection
with Figures 1A-1C may alter various material properties of the mat or lattice. For
example, and as further outlined below, heating and stretching a fiber mat may increase
the durability of the material, increase the smoothness of the material, increase
handling characteristics, increase the tensile strength of the material, increase
resistance to creep, or otherwise alter the material. Further, in some embodiments,
heating and stretching the material tends to align a portion of the fibers which comprise
the mat in the direction the material is stretched. This alignment of the microstructure
and/or nanostructure of the material may impact microscale and/or nanoscale interactions
between the mat and other structures, such as body cells. Fiber alignment may likewise
alter the flow characteristics of a fluid flowing in contact with the mat. For example,
a tubular membrane configured to accommodate blood flow may exhibit different flow
conditions through the tube if the fibers are aligned by heating and stretching as
compared to randomly disposed fibers.
[0032] As further outlined in the examples below, heating and stretching a mat may or may
not tend to align the fibers in the direction the material is stretched. In some embodiments,
the degree of fiber alignment may be related to the temperature at which the mat was
heated prior to stretching. Still further, stretching a mat in multiple directions
may tend to maintain random fiber disposition of a mat in embodiments wherein the
original mat exhibited generally random fiber disposition.
[0033] Regardless of whether heating and stretching tend to align the fibers in the direction
the mat was stretched, the mat may exhibit different properties in a stretched direction
as compared to a non-stretched direction. For example, the mat may exhibit increased
tensile strength and/or increased resistance to creep in the stretched direction while
these properties may be generally unchanged or decreased in a non-stretched direction.
Further, stretching may increase the porosity of a mat of serially deposited fibers.
In some embodiments, stretching may increase the porosity of a mat by up to 10 times
the original porosity, including up to eight times, up to six times, up to four times,
and up to two times the original porosity. Figures 3 and 4,
infra, visually illustrate how porosity may be affected by stretching. In some embodiments,
a mat may be stretched while at room temperature to increase porosity.
[0034] Additionally, in some embodiments, a tubular membrane heated and stretched in the
axial direction may exhibit greater tensile strength in the axial direction as compared
to the properties of the membrane prior to heating and stretching. In this example,
the tensile strength in the radial direction, however, may be similar to the tensile
strength of the membrane in that direction prior to heating and stretching. Thus,
the membrane may have similar properties in both these directions prior to heating
and stretching, but may exhibit greater tensile strength in the axial direction after
heating and stretching. In some embodiments, the tensile strength of the membrane
is 150%-300% that of the membrane prior to heating and stretching in the direction
of stretching. For example, the tensile strength of the membrane is at least 150%,
at least 200%, at least 250% or at least 300% that of the membrane prior to heating
and stretching in the direction of stretching. In some embodiments, a mat may exhibit
decreased tensile strength or other changes in properties in a non-stretched direction
disposed perpendicular to the direction of stretching, as compared to those properties
prior to stretching.
[0035] In some embodiments, a material is stretched in multiple directions to increase strength
or otherwise alter the properties in those directions. In other embodiments, heating
and stretching change the properties in only one direction. For example, a tube may
be configured to be bolstered against creep in the radial direction, without substantially
affecting the material properties in the axial direction. Again, in some instances
an increase in particular properties in a first direction is correlated with a decrease
in one or more of the same properties in a second direction.
[0036] Additionally, materials having different properties in different directions may be
combined to create a composite construct. As indicated above, serially deposited fiber
mats may be heated and work-hardened by stretching to change the material properties
of the mat and/or to tend to align the fibers of the mat. In one example, a composite
construct comprising at least one layer of axially stretched material and at least
one layer of radially stretched material may exhibit increased strength in both directions.
Various layers having various properties may be combined to tailor the properties
of the resultant construct. It is within the scope of this disclosure to bond any
adjacent layers of any construct through various processes, including use of tie layers
disposed between layers and bonded to each layer, heating adjacent layers to create
fiber entanglement, use of adhesives, and so forth. Fluorinated ethylene propylene
(FEP) may be used as a tie layer in some embodiments, including as a tie layer between
serially deposited layers of PTFE. Further expanded PTFE may be used as a tie layer
in some embodiments. One embodiment of a composite tube can be created by helically
or cigar wrapping a tube of serially deposited fibers (unstretched) with a film of
heat and stretch processed material, creating a porous luminal layer and a strong
creep-resistant reinforcement layer. Additional layers (such as an impervious layer
and/or a porous abluminal layer) may be added to the construct as well. Each layer
may be configured to optimize a physiologic interaction, for example.
[0037] Multilayered constructs may further comprise reinforcing structures, such as metal
scaffolds or frames. In some embodiments a reinforcing structure may comprise one
of Nitinol, stainless steel, chromium cobalt (MP35N), or titanium. Any layer of a
construct may be configured to be a blood contacting layer. Blood contacting layers
may be configured to interact with the blood or other biological elements and may
be configured with certain flow characteristics at the blood interface. Further, any
layer of a multilayered construct may be configured to be impermeable to tissue or
fluid migration. For example, an impermeable tie layer may be disposed between porous
inner and outer layers of a construct. Multilayered constructs comprising any number
of layers are within the scope of this disclosure. For example, constructs having
at least one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten or more layers
or more are within the scope of this disclosure. Any layer or material described herein
may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct, including, for example, serially
deposited fiber layers, reinforcing layers comprising reinforcing structures including
frames or scaffolds, layers of heat or stretch processed material, layers set in particular
geometries, tie layers, impervious or impermeable layers, porous layers, layers configured
to be blood contacting, layers configured to resist creep, wrapped film layers, dip-coated
layers, and so forth.
[0038] Single layer devices or multilayered constructs within the scope of this disclosure
may comprise tubes, grafts, stents, stent grafts, vascular grafts, patches, prosthetics,
or any other medical appliance. Medical appliances configured for oral surgery and/or
plastic surgery are also within the scope of this disclosure. Further, multilayered
constructs wherein no layer comprises expanded PTFE (ePTFE) are also within the scope
of this disclosure.
[0039] Figures 2A and 2B are Scanning Electron Micrographs (SEMs), both at 950X magnification,
of rotational spun tubular membranes; the membrane of Figure 2A was stretched in the
axial direction of the tubular membrane while the membrane of Figure 2B was stretched
in the radial direction. In both instances, the membranes were heated and stretched
such that the membranes exhibited increased fiber alignment in the direction of stretching.
Both membranes were manufactured with generally random fiber disposition while both
Figures 2A and 2B reflect observable fiber alignment. Further, both membranes exhibited
greater strength in the stretched direction as opposed to a non-stretched direction
oriented perpendicular to the stretched direction. Further, the membranes exhibited
greater elasticity or "spring" in the non-stretched direction oriented perpendicular
to the stretched direction. It was observed that these samples exhibited increased
strength in the direction of fiber alignment and decreased strength in the direction
perpendicular to fiber alignment.
[0040] Heating and stretching a mat or lattice of serially deposited fibers may tend to
decrease the thickness of the mat or lattice. For example, a tubular mat stretched
in the range from 200% to 450% may exhibit a decrease in material thickness of between
10% and 90%, including from 20% to 80% and from 40% to 60%. Embodiments within these
ranges did not exhibit holes or defects from the stretching process, and the overall
surface quality of the material was maintained after stretching. Further, these ranges
are intended to correlate the degree of stretching and the decrease in material thickness,
not to constitute upper or lower bounds. Materials may be stretched further than the
given range to further decrease the material thickness, for instance. Example 1.8,
infra, includes specific examples of material thicknesses after heat and stretch processing.
[0041] As stated above, it is within the scope of this disclosure to heat and stretch various
serially deposited fiber mats comprising various materials. Many of the examples discussed
below refer particularly to PTFE fiber mats which have been processed in a variety
of ways. These examples, or any other example referencing PTFE, may analogously apply
to other materials as well. Specific temperatures for heating or otherwise processing
a material may be analogously applied to other materials by considering the material
properties (such as melting point) of such materials and analogizing to the examples
below.
[0042] Unless otherwise noted, the PTFE fiber mats discussed in connection with the following
examples comprise fiber mats created by rotational spinning a PTFE dispersion onto
a collector. The mats were then sintered at 385° C to remove solvents, water, and
fiberizing agents, and/or to set the structure of the mat. Though the mats recited
in particular examples may be rotational spun, it is within the scope of this disclosure
to process electrospun mats as described below.
[0043] Generally, serially deposited PTFE fiber mats may be heated at temperatures between
about 65° C and about 400° C while heating and stretching the mats. For example, serially
deposited PTFE fiber mats may be heated at temperatures above about 65 ° C, above
about 100 ° C, above about 150 ° C, above about 200° C, above about 250 ° C, above
about 300° C, above about 350° C, above about 370° C, and above about 385 ° C. Additionally,
serially deposited PTFE fiber mats may be stretched at room temperature (22° C) without
heating.
[0044] Serially deposited PTFE mats may be stretched from 150% to 500% of the initial length
of the mat in the direction of stretching, including stretching mats to between 200%
and 350%, between 250% and 300%, and between 300% and 500% of the original length
of the mats in the direction of stretching. The amount of length change may be related
to the temperature at which the mat is heated, the force applied when the mat is stretched,
the original thickness of the mat, and the rate at which the mat is stretched. In
the examples below, some test materials were stretched to 425% or more of their initial
length; however, this did not appear to be an upper bound. Without being bound by
theory, the examples suggest the material may be stretched further without failure.
[0045] Processing serially deposited fiber mats or lattices through heating and stretching
may impact various properties of the mats. Tensile strength, resistance to creep,
elasticity, and so forth may all be impacted. In some embodiments, processed mats
are used as layers of multilayered constructs to provide particular properties in
a particular direction.
[0046] As further detailed in Examples 1.1-1.7 below, the temperature at which the mats
of serially disposed PTFE fibers were heated was observed to affect the tendency of
the fibers of the mats to align after the mats were stretched. As detailed below,
materials were heated at temperatures well below the crystalline melt temperature
of PTFE (325° C) and well above this point. Though all mats appeared to exhibit changed
properties, higher temperatures generally correlated with increased fiber alignment.
Without being bound by theory, mats which were heated at or above 370° C exhibited
more fiber alignment than mats heated at temperatures lower than 370° C. Additionally,
as detailed in Example 1.9 below, it was observed that tensile strength increased
after fiber mats were heated and stretched, whether or not the mat was heated at 370°
C or more. The amount of the increase in tensile strength was observed to be affected
by the temperature at which the mat was heated and the amount the material was stretched.
[0047] Various heating and stretching processes were tested in Examples 1.1-1.9 below. For
Examples 1.1-1.5, tubular membranes comprising rotational spun PTFE fibers were prepared
by rotational spinning a PTFE dispersion at 8000 RPM onto a horizontal rotating mandrel,
the mandrel rotating at 1500 RPM. The membranes were rotational spun for 6 minutes
then sintered by heating the membranes at 385° C for 15 minutes. The membranes manufactured
under these parameters exhibit generally random fiber disposition. SEMs were prepared
for certain examples, as noted. In the case of tubular samples, the SEMs were taken
of the inside diameter of the membrane. The membranes prepared for Examples 1.6-1.7
were prepared by a similar process to that of Examples 1.1-1.5, with specific differences
noted in these examples. The process for manufacturing the membranes of Examples 1.8-1.9
is described in these examples.
Example 1.1
[0048] A fully sintered tubular membrane was heated in an oven at 300° C for 6 minutes.
The membrane had an initial length of 40 mm. After heating, the membrane was manually
stretched in the axial direction by gripping the ends of the membrane and stretching.
The stretching was done immediately, while the membrane was still at an elevated temperature.
Immediately after stretching, the ends of the membrane were held at a fixed length,
while the membrane remained under tension, until the membrane cooled to near room
temperature. Upon cooling, it was observed that the membrane exhibited greater tensile
strength in the axial (stretched) direction than in the radial direction.
Example 1.2
[0049] A fully sintered tubular membrane was heated in an oven at 300° C for 6 minutes.
The membrane had an initial length of 128 mm, an initial wall thickness of 0.44 mm,
and an initial weight of 1.464 g. After heating, the membrane was immediately stretched
while still at an elevated temperature. The membrane was stretched at a moderate rate
to an end length of 280 mm, or to a final length which was 219% of the original length.
The post-processing weight was measured as 1.462 g.
[0050] It was observed that the heated and stretched membrane exhibited greater strength
in the axial (stretched) direction as compared to the radial direction. SEMs of the
heated and stretched membrane were prepared. Figures 3A and 3C are SEMs of the processed
membrane at 170X magnification, and Figures 3B and 3D are SEMs of the processed membrane
at 950X magnification. Figures 3A and 3B are images of the same general region at
different magnifications, while Figures 3C and 3D are of the same general region (which
is different from the region imaged in Figures 3A and 3B) at different magnifications.
It was observed from the SEMs that the processed membrane retained generally random
fiber disposition, though the fibers appeared to be more aligned than expected when
compared to a membrane that had not been stretch processed. Again, it was observed
that the membrane exhibited greater strength in the stretched direction, as compared
to the radial direction, even without significant fiber alignment in the stretched
direction.
Example 1.3
[0051] A fully sintered tubular membrane was heated in an oven at 250° C for 6 minutes.
The membrane had an initial length of 120 mm, an initial wall thickness of 0.40 mm,
and an initial weight of 1.294 g. After heating, the membrane was immediately stretched
while still at an elevated temperature. The membrane was stretched at an increased
rate (as compared to the membrane of Example 1.2) to an end length of 290 mm, or to
a final length which was 242% of the original length. The post-processing weight was
measured as 1.286 g.
[0052] It was observed that the heated and stretched membrane exhibited greater strength
in the axial (stretched) direction as compared to the radial direction. SEMs of the
heated and stretched membrane were prepared. Figures 4A and 4C are SEMs of the processed
membrane at 170X magnification, and Figures 4B and 4D are SEMs of the processed membrane
at 950X magnification. Figures 4A and 4B are images of the same general region at
different magnifications, while Figures 4C and 4D are of the same general region (which
is different from the region imaged in Figures 4A and 4B) at different magnifications.
It was observed from the SEMs that the processed membrane exhibited increased fiber
alignment and increased porosity. It was observed that the rate of stretching increased
the degree of fiber alignment.
Example 1.4
[0053] A fully sintered tubular membrane was heated in an oven at 250° C for 6 minutes.
The membrane had an initial length of 107 mm and an initial weight of 0.912 g. After
heating, the membrane was immediately stretched while still at an elevated temperature.
The membrane was stretched to an end length of 250 mm, or to a final length which
was 234% of the original length. The post-processing weight was measured as 0.905
g.
[0054] It was observed that the heated and stretched membrane exhibited greater strength
in the axial (stretched) direction as compared to the radial direction and that the
material exhibited increased porosity. Further, it was observed in this and similar
tests that the stretching process tended to naturally twist the tubular membrane.
This twisting appears to be related to how the tubular membrane was placed in the
oven and how it was gripped when pulled. In examples where the ends of a tubular membrane
were fixed during heating, the membrane did not twist when pulled in tension.
[0055] Additionally, prior to heating, the membrane was marked along its length at 10 mm
intervals. These intervals were measured again after the membrane was heated and stretched.
It was observed that the increase in length was generally uniform along the length
of the membrane, meaning the intervals generally each increased by the same amount.
Example 1.5
[0056] A fully sintered tubular membrane was heated in an oven at 385° C for 6 minutes.
The membrane had an initial length of 113 mm, an initial wall thickness of 0.33 mm,
and an initial weight of 0.691 g. After heating, the membrane was immediately stretched
while still at an elevated temperature. The membrane was stretched to an end length
of 350 mm, or to a final length which was 310% of the original length. The processed
membrane was measured to have a weight of 0.690 g.
[0057] It was observed that the heated and stretched membrane exhibited greater strength
in the axial (stretched) direction as compared to the radial direction. SEMs of the
heated and stretched membrane were prepared. Figures 5A and 5C are SEMs of the processed
membrane at 170X magnification, and Figures 5B and 5D are SEMs of the processed membrane
at 950X magnification. Figures 5A and 5B are images of the same general region at
different magnifications, while Figures 5C and 5D are of the same general region (which
is different from the region imaged in Figures 5A and 5B) at different magnifications.
It was observed from the SEMs that the processed membrane exhibited increased fiber
alignment as compared to the previous examples and as compared to the expected disposition
of the unprocessed membrane. Furthermore, some fibers disposed generally perpendicular
to the direction of stretching appeared to exhibit a wavy or "zigzag" general disposition
after stretching. It was thus observed that membranes heated at 385 °C exhibited greater
fiber alignment than those heated at lower temperatures. It was further observed that
this change in alignment was observed at temperatures above about 370° C but not as
pronounced at temperatures below this point.
Example 1.6
[0058] A membrane was rotational spun as generally described above; however, the membrane
of this example was spun between two collector-ends, but not directly spun onto a
mandrel or other collector. The resultant fibers thus "bridged" between the two collector-ends.
The fibers were not initially sintered prior to heating as part of the heating and
stretching process. Rather, the fibers were heated at 385° C for 6 minutes to sinter
the material, then immediately stretched while still at the elevated temperature.
Thus, in this example, heating to sinter the material and heating to process the material
were done as the same procedure.
[0059] The initially unsintered membrane was stretched without any notable difference in
procedure or result as compared to the initially sintered membranes of Examples 1.1-1.5.
The membrane exhibited similar properties, evaluated from a feel/tactile perspective,
to the initially sintered then processed membranes. SEMs of the heated and stretched
membrane were prepared. Figures 6A and 6C are SEMs of the processed membrane at 170X
magnification, and Figures 6B and 6D are SEMs of the processed membrane at 950X magnification.
Figures 6A and 6B are images of the same general region at different magnifications,
while Figures 6C and 6D are of the same general region (which is different from the
region imaged in Figures 6A and 6B) at different magnifications. It was further observed
that the material was thinner after being stretched.
Example 1.7
[0060] A membrane was rotational spun onto a mandrel as generally described above; however,
spun fibers were removed from the mandrel without sintering. The membrane was then
manually twisted eight times around itself to entangle the fibers. The fibers were
then heated at 385° C for 6 minutes to sinter the material, then immediately stretched
while still at the elevated temperature. Thus, in this example, heating to sinter
the material and heating to process the material were done as the same procedure.
After sintering of this twisted membrane, the PEO present in the dispersion turned
black (whereas in other examples it evaporated from the membrane during sintering).
Additionally, portions of the membrane constrained at the ends by clamps turned black
and were observed to be brittle.
[0061] The membrane was stretched to 200% of its original length. SEMs of the heated and
stretched membrane were prepared. Figures 7A and 7C are SEMs of the processed membrane
at 170X magnification, and Figures 7B and 7D are SEMs of the processed membrane at
950X magnification. Figures 7A and 7B are images of the same general region at different
magnifications, while Figures 7C and 7D are of the same general region (which is different
from the region imaged in Figures 7A and 7B) at different magnifications. It was observed
that the material was thinner after being stretched. It was also observed that the
fibers exhibited a high degree of alignment, notwithstanding the initial twisting
of the material.
Example 1.8
[0062] The change in material thickness for heated and stretched rotational spun PTFE membranes
was analyzed as follows. Thirteen rotational spun tubular membranes were prepared.
The initial lengths and wall thickness for each sample were recorded. The wall thickness
was measured by flattening the tubular member and measuring the thickness (resulting
in a measurement of two layers of the wall) and dividing by two. The membranes were
heated at either 250° C, 370° C, or 385° C and stretched. After stretching, the post-stretched
lengths and thicknesses of the materials were measured and recorded.
[0063] Figures 8A and 8B summarize the results of this example. Figure 8A is a graph plotting
the percent stretch against the percent decrease in wall thickness for materials stretched
at various temperatures. Figure 8B is a graph plotting the percent stretch against
the wall thickness decrease for materials stretched at various temperatures.
[0064] The membranes of this example exhibited percent decreases in wall thickness between
20% and 75%. The tested materials did not exhibit holes or defects from the stretching
process, and the overall surface quality and feel of each material were maintained
after stretching.
Example 1.9
[0065] The static mechanical behavior of heated and stretched rotational spun PTFE membranes
was analyzed by tensile testing, as outlined in this example. Ten single-layer membrane
samples were prepared by rotational spinning a PTFE/PEO dispersion at 7500 RPM onto
12-mm-diameter mandrels rotating at 1500 RPM. The mandrels were then placed in an
oven, and the membranes were sintered at 385° C for 20 minutes.
[0066] The membranes were post-processed by heating and stretching them at various temperatures.
Specifically, the membranes were heated to 285° C, 370° C, or 385° C and stretched
while at temperature with tension maintained during cooling. The control membranes
were not post-processed.
[0067] The membranes were tested by fixing 25-mm-long sections of the membrane tubes to
the grips of an Instron 5944 machine, and the tensile force was measured using a 1
kN load cell. Elongation was measured using the internal LVDT sensor. The strain was
calculated as the ratio of total elongation to area of the membrane. Membrane thickness
was measured using a Mitutoyo digital thickness gauge. Membranes that failed at the
Instron grips were excluded from the mechanical analysis.
[0068] Figures 9A-10D summarize the results of this testing. As the membranes comprised
a tubular geometry, the membranes are captioned as "grafts" on the graphs, but are
not actual vascular grafts. Figure 9A is a graph showing the stress/strain ratios
for the stretched and control grafts. Figure 9B is a graph showing the average stress
at max load, plotted against the stretch ratio of each sample graft, for the grafts
plotted in Figure 9A. Figure 10A is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for various
rotational spun samples stretched at 250° C. Figure 10B is a graph showing the stress/strain
curve for various rotational spun samples stretched at 370° C. Figure 10C is a graph
showing the stress/strain curve for various rotational spun samples stretched at 385°
C. Figure 10D is a graph showing the stress/strain curve for the materials of Figures
10A-10C, plotted on the same axes for comparison.
[0069] These results show distinct tensile properties between standard rotational spun PTFE
tubes and heated and stretched rotational spun PTFE tubes. Tensile analysis showed
that the average tensile stress at the material breaking points can be increased by
heating and stretching the membrane, and that the ultimate tensile strength is positively
correlated to the stretch ratio with possible degradation of the membrane starting
at stretch ratios beyond 350%.
[0070] Membranes stretched at 250° C exhibited tensile behavior more like control grafts,
while membranes stretched at 370° C and 385° C had much steeper stress-strain curves
and showed increased ultimate tensile stress. Ultimate tensile strength was increased
by an average of 169% for membranes stretched at 250° C. Ultimate tensile strength
was increased by an average of 226% for membranes stretched at 370° C and 291% for
membranes stretched at 385° C.
[0071] Post-processing of the membranes affected the tensile behavior with higher stretch
ratios and processing temperatures, effectively strain-hardening the membrane. Samples
9-2 and 9-3 did not show the same degree of strain-hardening as the other membranes
processed at 385° C. Samples 9-2 and 9-3 were only stretched to 2.5 times the original
length of the membrane, which was 28% less than the average stretch ratio of the other
grafts processed at 385° C. The ultimate tensile strength of these samples was 60%
lower than the average ultimate tensile strength of the other membranes processed
at 385° C. Without being bound by theory, this result suggests that stretch ratio
and processing temperature both affect the mechanical behavior of the membrane.
[0072] Additionally, tensile results of the heated and stretched rotational spun PTFE membranes
tended to show that tensile properties of rotational spun PTFE membranes can be engineered
with heat and mechanical post-processing. Ultimate tensile strength was increased
by an average of 169% for membranes stretched at 250° C, 226% for membranes stretched
at 370° C, and 291% for membranes stretched at 385° C.
[0073] Moreover, these results suggest increased resistance to creep in the direction of
stretching. Creep behavior correlates directly to the mechanical properties of the
membrane. Thus, in embodiments wherein the material exhibits greater strength in the
stretched direction and decreased strength in the un-stretched direction, the material
may also exhibit greater resistance to creep in the stretched direction and greater
susceptibility to creep in the un-stretched direction. In one exemplary embodiment,
a tube may be reinforced against creep in both the axial and radial directions by
heat and stretch processing of the tube in the axial direction, then helically wrapping
the tube with a strip of material that has been heat and stretch processed in the
long direction of the strip. The increased strength along the length of the strip
reinforces the hoop strength of the underlying tube. Additionally, creep behavior
is also a function of temperature for materials that soften at elevated temperatures.
Heating such a material and stretching that material while at an elevated temperature
may result in creep resistance not found in un-stretched materials.
Example 1.10
[0074] Water Entry Pressure (WEP) testing was done to determine the water entry pressure
of rotational spun tubes after post-processing by heating and stretching. Specifically,
two tubes (samples A and B, below) of serially deposited PTFE fiber mats were prepared
by rotational spinning an aqueous PTFE dispersion mixed with PEO and water. The tubes
were sintered and cooled. After cooling, each tube was measured to have an initial
length of 75 mm. The tubes were then heated at 385° C for six minutes. Sample A was
stretched to a final length of 260 mm while at temperature, and Sample B was stretched
to a final length of 320 mm while at temperature. Each sample was then cut to form
two test tubes from each sample, with lengths as shown below. A control tube of non-post-processed
rotational spun PTFE was also evaluated. Each tube was tested by connecting a syringe,
to provide water pressure, in fluid communication with a gauge and with the inside
lumen of the tube, as further detailed below.
[0075] A 60 ml syringe was filled with deionized water and connected to a 0-30 psi pressure
gauge. The tube was also connected to the pressure gauge at a first end of the tube.
The second end of the tube was clamped with a hemostat. The system was pressurized
using the syringe, and the pressure was recorded when two droplets of water were observed
to have passed through the material. The results are summarized in Table 1 below.
Two times the wall thickness, WEP pressure, sample length, and test observations are
shown in Table 1.
Table 1
| 2X Wall Thickness (mm) |
Sample No. |
WEP Pressure (psi) |
Sample Length (cm) |
Observations |
| 0.38 |
A (left) |
2.5 |
11 |
Tube aneurized to 14 mm diameter |
| 0.38 |
A (right) |
2 |
11 |
Tube aneurized to 15 mm diameter |
| 0.17 |
B (left) |
1 |
10 |
Tube aneurized to 30 mm diameter |
| 0.17 |
B (right) |
1 |
12 |
Tube aneurized to 30 mm diameter |
| 0.60 |
Control |
5 |
10 |
No aneurizing |
[0076] It was observed that tubes which have been heated and stretched in the axial direction
are able to hold pressure but exhibit decreased radial strength and would aneurize,
meaning the samples increased in diameter along the test length. This radial aneurization
was uniform along the tested length. The aneurization was correlated with high fiber
alignment in the axial direction. Without being bound by theory, fiber alignment in
the axial direction may be correlated with increased axial strength but decreased
radial strength.
2. Geometry Setting of Serially Deposited Fiber Mats
[0077] Serially deposited fibers may be set in various geometries by constraining the fibers
in a particular geometry and heating the fibers. For example, in some embodiments,
constraining a previously sintered (or otherwise structurally set) mat or lattice
of serially deposited fibers in a particular configuration, softening the material
of the mat or lattice (for example by heating), and allowing the material to reset
may result in a "memory" effect wherein the material retains at least a portion of
the constrained geometry. Materials may be shape-set as described in Section 2 of
this disclosure whether or not the materials have been heated and stretched as described
in Section 1 of this disclosure.
[0078] In embodiments comprising serially deposited polymeric fibers, heating the material
at about the crystalline melt point of the material may facilitate setting of the
geometry. The disclosure below may refer specifically to rotational spun PTFE fiber
mats; however, it may be analogously applied to other processes (such as electrospinning)
and/or other materials.
[0079] Figures 11A-11C illustrate an exemplary process of setting the geometry of a serially
deposited fiber mat. Figure 11A is a perspective view of a serially deposited fiber
membrane 210 disposed on a mandrel 220. The membrane 210 extends from a first end
211 to a second end 212. The membrane 210 may be serially deposited on the mandrel,
220 for example, through rotational spinning or electrospinning. The membrane 210
may also be sintered on the mandrel 220.
[0080] The sintered membrane 210 may be removed from the mandrel 220 by peeling the membrane
210 back, slipping it off, and so forth, as shown in Figure 11B. Though the specific
illustration includes a cylindrical mandrel, the present disclosure also applies to
sheets, spheres, and other geometries of serially deposited fiber mats.
[0081] The membrane 210 of sintered serially disposed polymeric fibers may then be constrained
in a variety of configurations. For example, Figure 11C is a perspective view of the
membrane 210 being compressed onto the mandrel 220. This configuration is exemplary;
the membrane 210 could be constrained into various shapes. In the illustrated embodiment,
the membrane 210 is compressed such that the tube is compressed along a shorter length,
tending to create annular ridges or corrugations 240 along the length of the membrane
210.
[0082] Once the membrane 210 is constrained into the desired shape, the membrane 210 may
be heated while constrained. After heating and cooling, the membrane 210 may tend
to retain the constrained shape.
[0083] Figures 12A-12D illustrate an embodiment of a serially deposited fiber membrane
which has been set into a corrugated configuration, analogous to the process described
in connection with Figures 11A-11C, to form a corrugated tubular graft 310.
[0084] Figure 12A is a perspective view of the corrugated tubular graft 310 in a first
configuration. The graft 310 extends from a first end 311 to a second end 312 and
has annular corrugations 340 along the length thereof. In the configuration of Figure
12A, the graft 310 is disposed in a generally straight axial configuration.
[0085] Figure 12B is a perspective view of the corrugated tubular graft 310 in a second
configuration. The graft 310 follows a slightly more twisted or waved disposition
as compared to the configuration of Figure 12A. As generally indicated by the arrows,
the graft 310 may exhibit elasticity between the first 311 and second 312 ends due
to the corrugation. When pulled in the direction of the arrows (opposite the direction
the graft 310 was compressed prior to heat-setting) then released, the graft 310 will
tend to return to the heat-set corrugated configuration.
[0086] As further illustrated in Figures 12C and 12D, the corrugations may facilitate bending
of the graft 310 between the first 311 and second 312 ends. Specifically, the annular
corrugations may both reinforce the graft 310 and provide elasticity such that the
graft 310 can bend in a variety of configurations without kinking. Thus, a corrugated
graft 310 may be configured for use in bent or twisted configurations.
[0087] Multilayered constructs comprising corrugated or otherwise heat-set components are
within the scope of this disclosure. For example, a tubular graft may comprise a corrugated
tube coupled to a second tube having a relatively smooth wall (with respect to the
corrugated tube). The tubes may overlap and be coaxial. In some embodiments a construct
will be configured with a smooth wall tube defining an inside diameter (which may
be a blood contacting surface) and a corrugated tube defining an outside diameter
(to provide support to the construct). As used herein, a smooth wall component refers
to a component without visually apparent surface defects or irregularities.
Example 2.1
[0088] A membrane of rotational spun PTFE fibers was spun for 5 minutes from a 0.07 g/ml
PEO/PTFE dispersion at 7000 RPM onto an 8 mm mandrel rotating at 1500 RPM. The membrane
was then sintered at 385°C for 15 minutes. The membrane was cooled and removed from
the mandrel. The cooled membrane was stretched to about 125% of its original length
while cool, then axially compressed onto the mandrel to form a corrugated tube. The
tube was constrained in the axially compressed state by wrapping the tube with PTFE
tape. The compressed membrane tube was then heated at 325° C for 15 minutes.
[0089] Once the membrane tube was cooled and the tape removed, the membrane tube retained
the annular corrugations, similar to the corrugated graft illustrated in Figures 12A-12D.
It was observed that the corrugated membrane tube was more compliant than non-corrugated
tubes of the same material. Further, the lumen of the corrugated membrane tube remained
open, illustrating kink resistance, when the membrane tube was bent up to 180°. It
was further noted that the material was heated at 325° C, the crystalline melt point
of the PTFE. Various materials may be set in various geometries through analogous
processes.
[0090] Figures 13A and 13B are SEMs of the corrugated membrane of this example. Figure
13A is an SEM at 170X magnification, and Figure 13B is an SEM at 950X magnification.
A portion of the corrugations can be seen in these SEMs.
3. Reinforced Grafts
[0091] Tubular grafts may be reinforced through annular rings, helical reinforcements, and
so forth. For example, annular corrugations heat-set in a tubular graft may comprise
annular reinforcements. Additionally, separate components may be coupled to a graft
to provide reinforcement. Reinforcing members may provide hoop strength, resist kinking,
provide other structural support, and so on.
[0092] Figure 14A is a front view of a tube 410 with reinforcing rings 440 disposed around
a first layer 430. The first layer 430 and the rings 440 may comprise the same material
or different materials. For example, the rings 440 may comprise generally stiffer
materials than the first layer 430. Thus the first layer 430 may be configured to
provide softness or elasticity to the construct, with the rings 440 configured to
add strength. For example, the first layer 430 may comprise PTFE while the rings 440
comprise FEP. Figure 14B is a front view of the tube 410 with a second layer 435 disposed
over the first layer 430 and rings 440.
[0093] In some embodiments, the rings 440 are removable, to allow a practitioner to tailor
the length of the reinforcing segment. In some embodiments removable rings 440 are
used in connection with constructs having no second layer 435, while in other embodiments
a portion of the second layer 435 is removable with the removable rings 440. Additionally
or alternatively, constructs having one or more layers of serially deposited fibers
may be reinforced with a metal frame or other structure, including structures comprised
of Nitinol.
[0094] In some embodiments a construct is manufactured by serially depositing a tube of
PTFE fibers (such as by rotational spinning or electrospinning), sintering the tube,
and cooling. Discrete FEP rings and/or a helical spline of beading may be added for
reinforcement. The tube may then be heated (for example, at about the crystalline
melt point of the FEP) to bond the components. An additional layer of serially deposited
PTFE fibers may be separately formed and placed over the rings before or after bonding,
and may be serially deposited directly onto the rings. Furthermore, a helical spline
or one or more grooved or raised portions may be comprised of serially deposited fibers.
For example, fibers could be deposited on a helically threaded mandrel, the fibers
creasing a tubular layer with integrally formed helical ridges or grooves (corresponding
to the threads) on an inside diameter of the layer. After sintering, the grooved tube
is removed from the mandrel by unthreading. The sintered tube may be utilized with
the grooves on the inside diameter, or inverted so that the grooves are on the outside
diameter and the inside diameter is smooth.
[0095] Referring again to Figures 14A and 14B, the first layer 430, the second layer 435,
the rings 440, or any other portion of the construct may be formed of serially deposited
fibers and may be heat- and stretch-processed or geometry-set as described in Sections
1 and 2 of this disclosure. For example, a heat-set corrugated graft may be used in
connection with additional reinforcing rings formed of discrete components.
[0096] Reinforced and/or non-porous portions of a graft may also be created by densifying
a portion of a serially deposited fiber mat or lattice. Figures 15A-15C are photographs
of densified portions of rotational spun PTFE fiber mats. Specifically, Figure 15A
is a photograph of a densified portion of a first rotational spun tube, Figure 15B
is a photograph of a densified portion of a second rotational spun tube, and Figure
15C is a backlit photograph of the densified portion of the rotational spun tube of
Figure 15B. The backlit photograph illustrates the increased translucence of the densified
portion.
[0097] These densified portions may be created by applying heat and/or force to a local
area of the mat, compressing the fibers in that area and increasing the density of
the mat. This may also reduce the porosity of the mat at that point and may act as
a reinforced portion of the mat. The densified portions of Figures 15A-15C appear
as annular lines on the photographs. These portions were made by compressing the tubular
membrane (while on a mandrel) with a hot roller.
[0098] The mat may be thinner and less porous at the densified portions, but exhibit increased
strength and density. Densification may be used to create impermeable or relatively
non-porous segments of a membrane.
[0099] Figures 16A-16D are SEMs of the densified portion of the rotational spun tube of
Figures 15B and 15C. Figure 16A is an SEM at 25X magnification of the densified portion,
and Figure 16B is an SEM at 950X magnification of the same area. The SEMs show less
porosity at the densified portion at both levels of magnification.
[0100] Figure 16C is an SEM (1 10X magnification) of the rotational spun tube showing both
the densified portion and a non-densified portion. A transition to decreased porosity
and less distinct fiber structures can be seen between the non-densified portion (to
the left) and the densified portion (to the right). Figure 16D is an SEM (950X magnification)
of the rotational spun tube showing a partially densified portion. As compared with
Figure 16B, the SEM of a more densified portion at the same magnification, the partially
densified sample shows more distinct fiber structures and more porosity, but less
so than a non-densified portion.
4. Further Applications for Serially Deposited Fiber Mats and Lattices
[0101] Serially deposited fiber mats or lattices may exhibit reduced hole leakage when a
cannula or another instrument pierces the fiber mat, as compared to other materials
not comprising serially deposited fibers. The microstructure or nanostructure of the
mat may facilitate contraction of the material around the void space after the cannula
or other instrument is removed. The material may elastically recoil after piercing,
generally sealing the opening. Serially deposited fiber mats may further exhibit less
tearing or elongation caused by perforation. A suture passing through a serially deposited
fiber mat is an example of this embodiment. The mat of serially deposited fibers may
contract around the suture, reducing the area in which fluid can pass. Figures 17A-17D
are SEMs showing two sutures in rotational spun PTFE mats as compared to commercially
available expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) vascular graft materials. The rotational
spun mats exhibit smaller openings around the sutures, suggesting less leakage.
[0102] Figure 17A is an SEM (100X magnification) of a rotational spun mat with a propylene
suture disposed therein. Figure 17B is an SEM (100X magnification) of a commercially
available ePTFE vascular graft with a propylene suture disposed therein. Figure 17C
is an SEM (100X magnification) of a rotational spun mat with a silk suture disposed
therein. Figure 17D is an SEM (100X magnification) of a commercially available ePTFE
vascular graft with a silk suture disposed therein.
[0103] Additionally, serially deposited fibers may be used as layered coatings on a variety
of medical appliances or other devices. These coatings may be used to improve surface
interactions and/or change surface properties such as hydrophobicity and coefficient
of friction. A coating of serially deposited fibers may be used to improve surface
interactions of artificial joints, such as knee or hip implants, at the interaction
points between components of the artificial joints and/or other artificial components
or biologic structures. Also, coatings on devices such as catheters may change the
hydrophobicity of the device.
[0104] Serially deposited mats or lattices may further be used as scaffolds for biologic
tissue growth. Rotational spun ceramics, for example, may be used as a scaffold for
bone growth and/or as prosthetic vertebrae.
5. Material Characteristics of Exemplary Serially Deposited Fiber Mats
[0105] Material characteristics of serially deposited fiber mats may be analyzed by imaging
a portion of the fiber mat and evaluating the characteristics of the fibers shown
in the image. The images may be evaluated manually and/or through the use of software
or other analysis tools. Such images may be magnified to facilitate characterization
of the fiber mat. For example, in some instances, Scanning Electron Micrographs (SEMs)
may be used when characterizing a fiber mat.
[0106] The ranges and characteristics disclosed below were determined by mounting samples
of serially deposited fiber mats on SEM imaging stubs. The mats were then imaged using
a JEOL scanning electron microscope. The images evaluated with respect to the disclosure
below were each taken at 950X magnification.
[0107] The SEMs were evaluated using software analysis to measure various characteristics
of the fiber mats. As part of this exemplary process, the image is first converted
to a "binary image," or an image showing only black and white portions, for example.
The binary image is then analyzed, fibers identified, and characteristics determined
by comparing the relative numbers and placements of each type of binary pixel. For
example, an image is converted to a black and white image wherein black portions represent
gaps or holes in the serially deposited fiber mat while white portions represent the
fibers of the mat. The software thus identifies the presence and position of fibers
and pores or open portions of the fiber mat. As further detailed below, characteristics
such as fiber width and pore size may be determined by analyzing these binary images.
Still further, characteristics of relative fibers, such as the number of fiber branches,
intersections, bundles, fiber density, and so forth, may be determined as further
detailed below. In some instances, a code or script may be configured to make various
analyses and calculations.
[0108] In one embodiment, the analysis software calibrates the subject image prior to analysis
to ensure accurate measurements. Such calibration is performed by using images of
objects traceable to NIST standards and spaced at known intervals. The minimum pixel
distance between such objects is determined and then applied as a standard to measure
other materials in the image, materials which are defined as groups of pixels in the
binary images. The resolution accuracy for the 950X SEMs described herein is ±0.0526
µm.
[0109] Various features of a fiber mat may be identified based on an SEM or other image
and/or a binary image obtained from an SEM or other image. These features may be identified
manually by a user, through the use of software, or both, including instances wherein
a user manually confirms features identified by software. In addition to features
defined by the presence or absence of fibers (e.g., number of fibers, fiber density,
number of pores, average pore size, percent porosity), some features may be defined
by the relative positions of more than one fiber.
[0110] As used below, fiber diameter refers to the shortest distance crossing the width
of a fiber. The fiber thus extends along an axis orthogonal to a line across the width
of the fiber. Relative angles of fibers may be determined by comparing these axes
of extension. A pore within a fiber mat is defined as an area or volume encapsulated
by intersecting or branched fibers. An intersection of fibers comprises one or more
fibers crossing such that the axes of the fibers are not in the same plane at the
point of intersection. Branched fibers comprise instances wherein fibers divide into
two or more fibers. Furthermore, a bundle of fibers is defined as one or more fibers
in contact in which the axes of the fibers are parallel or substantially parallel
along a portion of the fibers.
[0111] Figure 18 is an SEM at 950X magnification of a first sample of a serially deposited
fiber mat 550. The fibers of the serially deposited mat 550 of Figure 18 are generally
randomly aligned, not exhibiting significant fiber alignment. An example of bundled
fibers 560, or one or more fibers in contact in which the axes of the fibers are parallel
or substantially parallel along a portion of the fibers, is indicated. Additionally,
an example of branched fibers 570, or fibers dividing into two or more fibers, is
also shown. Finally, an example of a fiber intersection 580, or an instance where
one or more fibers cross such that the axes of the fibers are not in the same plane,
is also indicated.
[0112] Figure 19 is an SEM at 950X magnification of a second sample of a serially deposited
fiber mat 650. The fibers of the serially deposited fiber mat 650 of Figure 19 exhibit
increased fiber alignment as compared to the serially deposited fiber mat 550 of Figure
18. As with the embodiment of Figure 18, examples of bundled fibers 660, branched
fibers 670, and intersecting fibers 680 are indicated.
[0113] Without being bound by theory, it has been observed that tubular medical devices
comprising an inside surface of generally aligned fibers may exhibit favorable biologic
responses. Again, without being bound by theory, fibers along the inside diameter
of a tubular prosthesis configured to accommodate blood flow may facilitate endothelization
of the inside diameter when the fibers are generally aligned along the direction of
flow.
[0114] Figure 20 is an SEM at 950X magnification of the serially deposited fiber mat 750
(from Figure 18) with lines indicating fiber axes and widths. To determine average
fiber width and average fiber angle, a number of points may be randomly selected within
the portions of the image identified as fibers (the white image portions in Figure
20). The shortest straight distance across the width of each fiber is then measured
for each point. The fiber widths corresponding to a collection of points for the serially
deposited fiber mat 750 of Figure 20 are indicated by white lines designated by reference
numeral 795.
[0115] Fiber axis may then be determined by extending an axis 790 orthogonal to, and through
the midpoint of, each width line 795. These axes 790 may extend along the fiber until
the fiber turns away from itself or until another fiber crosses the axis 790. In instances
wherein the image is composed of black (open space in the exemplary embodiment) and
white (fibers in the exemplary embodiment) pixels, the axes 790 may extend until intersecting
a pixel indicating open space.
[0116] Fiber angle may then be determined by comparing the angle of these axes 790 with
a coordinate system. For example, a reference line may be extended across the SEM,
and the angle between each axis 790 and the reference line determined. In such a coordinate
system, each axis 790 will form an angle between 0° and 180° with the reference line,
when measuring each angle from the reference line in the same direction and from the
same side of the reference line. Because the orientation of the SEM (or the placement
of the reference line with respect to the SEM) will impact angles measured in this
way, the measured angles may be considered relative, rather than absolute, values.
In other words, fiber angle may be expressed as the relative position of the fibers
from an arbitrary reference.
[0117] Patterns in fiber orientation may then be expressed by comparing the relative angles
formed between each axis 790 and the reference line. Comparing the relative angles
between the axes 790 and the reference line to each other nullifies the arbitrary
nature of the placement of the reference line. In other words, expressing the angles
in terms of their similarity or difference to other angles will tend to show a generally
even distribution of angles for random fibers and a clustered distribution for aligned
fibers, regardless of the initial position of the reference line. The angle formed
between a first fiber and the reference line will be similar to the angles between
other fibers which are generally aligned with the first fiber.
[0118] The shape and mode of the distribution of fiber angles with respect to an arbitrary
reference may thus indicate the degree to which the fibers are aligned. Random fiber
alignment will generate an even distribution, while aligned fibers will generate a
clustered distribution. In some instances, a clustered distribution may create a distribution
generally shaped as a bell curve, with a cluster of fiber angles around a particular
angle sloping down to relatively few fiber angles at the "tails" of the curve. Because
the reference line is arbitrary, the position of the angle value at the center of
the curve (with respect to the reference line) is also arbitrary. The cluster, curve,
and tails may be understood as ranges of angles (such as 60% of the angles fall within
a 40° range). To nullify any effect due to the arbitrary placement of the reference,
ranges of angles given herein equate 0° and 180° from the reference line as the same
angle. In other words, a fiber lying directly on the reference line could be expressed
as disposed at either 0° or 180° to the reference line. Continuous ranges of angles
may thus cross the 0°/180° point on the arbitrary coordinate system. For example,
a range of 20° centered around an angle of 175° (with respect to the reference line)
would encompass angles from 165° to 180 ° and from 0° to 5° (with respect to the reference
line).
[0119] In some embodiments, the fiber angles can also be categorized, and the distribution
approximated, by sorting the fiber angles into various "bins" or groups of angles
with respect to the reference line, such as X fibers from angles between 0° and 10°
with respect to the reference line, Y fibers from angles between 10° and 20°, and
so forth. Again, in such an expression, the orientation of the reference line (and
likewise the orientation of the SEM) will only affect the expression of the angles
to the extent it influences the relative positions of each bin. In other words, the
position of a bin is still determined with respect to the reference line, so the position
of the dividing angles between bins will depend on the position of the reference line.
Of course, the smaller the bin size, the less impact the position of the reference
line will have. For small enough bins, the placement of the reference line will have
no measureable effect.
[0120] Use of smaller bins will thus tend to mitigate the effects of the relative position
of a bin dividing line. For example, if the bins are large and a bin dividing line
splits a cluster of fiber angles, the numerical count of angles may not clearly indicate
the presence and/or size of the cluster. However, if the bins are small, the higher
number of bins will tend to mitigate such effects, and the same cluster will be seen
across multiple small adjacent bins. In a random fiber alignment, the angles should
divide substantially equally into bins regardless of the relative position of the
bins as long as each bin contains the same magnitude range of angles. Aligned fibers
will show clustering within adjacent bins. In either case, smaller bin size will more
precisely express the fiber angle distribution.
[0121] Fiber angles were determined for a number of randomly identified fibers for the fiber
mats shown in Figures 18 and 19. Again, Figure 20 is a graphical representation of
the points and fiber angles identified for the mat of Figure 18. The fiber angles
were then sorted into bins at 10° intervals. The results are shown in Table 2, below.
Table 2
| |
Figure 18 - Random Fibers |
Figure 19 - Aligned Fibers |
| Angle Bins (in degrees) |
Number of Angles in Bin |
Percent of Angles in Bin |
Number of Angles in Bin |
Percent of Angles in Bin |
| 0-10 |
6 |
6.32% |
4 |
6.35% |
| 10-20 |
8 |
8.42% |
5 |
7.94% |
| 20-30 |
8 |
8.42% |
3 |
4.76% |
| 30-40 |
7 |
7.37% |
9 |
14.29% |
| 40-50 |
9 |
9.47% |
13 |
20.63% |
| 50-60 |
5 |
5.26% |
15 |
23.81% |
| 60-70 |
5 |
5.26% |
3 |
4.76% |
| 70-80 |
9 |
9.47% |
1 |
1.59% |
| 80-90 |
4 |
4.21% |
1 |
1.59% |
| 90-100 |
8 |
8.42% |
1 |
1.59% |
| 100-110 |
1 |
1.05% |
2 |
3.17% |
| 110-120 |
1 |
1.05% |
0 |
0.00% |
| 120-130 |
4 |
4.21% |
1 |
1.59% |
| 130-140 |
4 |
4.21% |
0 |
0.00% |
| 140-150 |
3 |
3.16% |
0 |
0.00% |
| 150-160 |
6 |
6.32% |
2 |
3.17% |
| 160-170 |
3 |
3.16% |
3 |
4.76% |
| 170-180 |
4 |
4.21% |
0 |
0.00% |
[0122] The fiber mat of Figure 18 showed a high degree of randomization with no range of
10° containing more than 10% of the angles of the distribution and over 75% of the
10° range bins containing at least 4.21% of the total number of angles. The fiber
mat of Figure 19, showing a high degree of alignment, had 58.7% of the fiber angles
within a 30° range and 44.4% of the fiber angles within a 20° range.
[0123] Fiber mats wherein less than 20%, including less than 15% and less than 10%, of the
analyzed fiber angles fall within a 10° range exhibit randomization of fibers. Fiber
mats wherein over 25%, including over 30%, or over 40%, of the angles fall in a 30°
range, and fiber mats wherein over 35%, including over 50%, or over 55%, of the angles
fall in a 40° range exhibit alignment of fibers. When analyzing serially deposited
fiber mats as discussed above, the degree of magnification and/or the size of the
image may affect the analysis at the extremes. In other words, too little magnification
will not allow for identification of individual fibers and too much magnification
may distort the effects of a few fibers (as an insufficient sampling of fibers may
be present in the viewing area of the image). The fiber mats examined above were enlarged
950X. Any magnification wherein at least 30 individual fibers can be identified and
the angles of those fibers determined may be utilized in the analysis above. Further,
references herein to characteristics of fiber mats determined by extrapolating a magnified
image (including pore size, fiber angle, fiber diameter, and so forth) are based on
a magnification and view wherein at least 30 individual fibers can be identified.
[0124] Additionally, serially deposited fiber mats having larger numbers of intersections
and/or branches per unit area exhibit less fiber alignment than mats with relatively
fewer intersections and/or branches.
[0125] The original set of random points and/or the width lines may be identified using
a software recognition program. Further, each point may be checked manually to ensure
that each point was on a fiber and each width line properly oriented.
[0126] Figure 21 is a chart summarizing the relationship of the angle, in degrees, of intersecting,
branching, or bundled fibers and general fiber alignment of a serially deposited fiber
mat, with respect to a reference line drawn along the direction of stretching for
an aligned mat. This chart illustrates the relationship along a continuum between
fiber angle and the degree of randomization of the fibers when compared to the direction
of stretching. As shown in Figure 21, angles between 0° and 10° and between 170° and
180 ° indicate the highest degree of fiber alignment while angles between 80° and
100° indicate the highest degree of randomization of the fibers. In other words, the
more the stretching process tends to align the fibers, the more fibers will fall in
the aligned angle ranges. The relative degree to which other angles indicate randomization
or alignment is indicated in Figure 21.
[0127] Features of a portion of a fiber mat may also be extrapolated with respect to the
entire mat. For example, average fiber angle of a portion, such as the portion of
a fiber mat imaged in an SEM, may be extrapolated to an entire mat in some instances.
Likewise, certain characteristics may be given with respect to units of area or volume
(e.g., number of fibers per square millimeter (mm
2)), which also may be extrapolated with respect to an entire serially deposited fiber
mat.
[0128] Serially deposited fibers may be directly deposited on various devices, products,
and surfaces. For instance, serially deposited fibers may be deposited directly on
an existing medical appliance such as a stent graft, stent, patch, or balloon. Such
coatings may be configured to provide additional strength to the appliance, increase
puncture resistance, provide a lubricious coating, and so forth.
[0129] Serially deposited fibers may have relatively small diameters and masses, which may
allow the fibers to evenly coat the contours of a medical appliance or other device.
For example, serially deposited fibers may be deposited on a balloon such that they
evenly coat the entire surface of the balloon, including the contours of the portions
of the balloon which transition between a large diameter and a small diameter. Thus,
in some embodiments, serially deposited fiber coatings may be applied at a relatively
uniform thickness and at a relatively uniform fiber density over the surface of a
balloon or other medical appliance.
[0130] In some embodiments, an exemplary balloon may be coated with serially deposited fibers
according to a procedure comprised as follows. First, an inflated balloon may be placed
within a serially deposited fiber apparatus, or in proximity to a rotational spinning
spinneret, for example. Material to be serially deposited may then be loaded into
the apparatus. The apparatus may then be operated and the balloon coated with fibers,
by rotational spinning or electrospinning, for example. The thickness of the coating
may be controlled by the amount of time the apparatus is allowed to run. The balloon
may then be removed. The serially deposited fiber material may be cured (for example,
to remove solvent) if necessary. In some instances, curing may comprise heating the
construct, including heating the construct such that the coating is sintered. Certain
materials, such as nylon, for example, may not require sintering. Additionally, in
some embodiments the balloon may first be dipped in or spray-coated with an additional
layer of material configured to bond the fibers to the substrate.
[0131] Serially deposited fibers may be deposited on a rotating medical appliance (e.g.,
a balloon or stent graft) or deposited on a rotating collection surface (e.g., a mandrel).
During serial deposition of fibers, controlling the direction and/or speed of rotation
of the medical appliance or collector may affect the deposition of fibers. For example,
in embodiments wherein a medical appliance or mandrel is configured to rotate about
an axis parallel to the axis of rotation of a rotational spinning spinneret, the fibers
may be deposited in an oriented arrangement, with the fibers tending to wrap around
a circumference of the medical appliance or mandrel.
[0132] For any type of serially deposited fibers collected on a rotating device, varying
the rotational speed of the collection device during the process may affect the properties
of the resultant serially deposited fiber mat. In some embodiments a collection mandrel
or medical device to be coated may be rotated at between about 100 RPM and about 10,000
RPM or more, including from about 200 RPM to about 5,000 RPM, from about 1,000 RPM
to about 3,000 RPM, or from about 1,000 RPM to about 10,000 RPM. In some embodiments,
higher rotational speeds may result in a relatively more aligned fiber pattern on
the collection mandrel or device. Serially deposited fiber coatings are further described
in
United States Patent Application No. 13/829,493, titled "Multilayered Balloon," filed
on March 14, 2013, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0133] Features such as the number of fibers, number of fiber intersections, number of fiber
branches, and number of fiber bundles per unit area may be determined by randomly
selecting a measurement area. The features may then be counted-manually, by software,
or both-and the number of features divided by the size of the sampling area to yield
a result in features per unit area. An analogous procedure could be used to determine
features per unit volume.
[0134] Serially deposited fiber mats may be formed with various features and characteristics.
Serially deposited fiber mats wherein 95% of the diameters of the serially deposited
fibers (which may be determined by measuring the widths of fibers as indicated above)
are between 50 nm and 6 µm, including from 700 nm to 3 µm and from 900 nm to 2 µm,
are within the scope of this disclosure.
[0135] Further, serially deposited fiber mats of thicknesses from 50 nm to 800 µm, including
from 50 µm to 200 µm, are within the scope of this disclosure. Serially deposited
fiber mats with a variety of fiber densities are likewise within the scope of this
disclosure: for example, mats comprising an average of from 5,000 to 150,000 fibers
per mm
2, including mats averaging between 12,000 and 55,000 fibers per mm
2.
[0136] Average pore diameter and average pore area may be calculated programmatically using
procedures analogous to those discussed in connection with other measurements herein.
For example, an image may be evaluated to distinguish between areas comprising fibers
and open areas, such as by creating a binary image as discussed above. Pores, or areas
within a fiber mat encapsulated by intersecting or branched fibers, may then be identified.
To determine the average pore diameter, a large sample of pores may be randomly selected
from the target image. In some instances between 50 and 300 pores may comprise the
sample. As used herein, the diameter of a particular pore is calculated by tracing
thirty diameters of equal angular spacing around the pore through the centroid of
the pore. The thirty diameters are then averaged to determine the calculated effective
diameter of the pore. The area of each identified pore may also be computed based
on the pixel area of each pore. Each pore identified for sampling may be manually
checked to confirm proper identification of pores. The average pore diameter of a
fiber mat may then be computed by averaging the calculated effective diameters of
the identified pore. Mats having average pore diameters of from 1 µm to 10 µm, including
from 2 µm to 3.5 µm, may be incorporated into implantable medical devices as disclosed
herein. Material total porosity may also be determined by the percentage of dark pixels
to light pixels in the image.
[0137] Serially deposited fiber mats may further be characterized by the number of intersections,
branches, or bundles within an area of the mat. Serially deposited fiber mats having
between 100 and 100,000 intersections per mm
2, including mats having between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per mm
2, are within the scope of this disclosure and may be incorporated into implantable
medical devices as disclosed herein. Additionally, serially deposited fiber mats having
between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2, including between 400 and 7,500 branches, per mm
2 are within the scope of this disclosure and may be incorporated into implantable
medical devices. Moreover, serially deposited fiber mats having between 0 and 30,000
bundles per mm
2, including between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2, are within the scope of this disclosure and may be incorporated into implantable
medical devices.
[0138] Figure 22 is an SEM at 950X magnification of a serially deposited fiber mat 850
which has been densified. A mat of serially deposited fibers may be densified by mechanically
forcing fibers together, application of heat to the fiber mat, or both. For example,
a hot roller may be used to densify a serially deposited fiber mat. Densifying may
be configured to reduce the porosity of the mat and/or force the fibers together.
Densifying may further reduce the average pore size of the mat. Serially deposited
fiber mats having average pore sizes of 2 µm or greater may be considered low density
mats (or portions of mats), mats (or portions thereof) having average pore sizes of
1.0 µm to 1.99 µm may be considered more dense, and mats (or portions thereof) having
average pore sizes from 0 µm to 0.99 µm may be termed fully dense. By way of illustration,
Figure 22 depicts a low density portion of a mat 896, a more dense portion of a mat
897, and a fully dense portion of a mat 898.
[0139] In some instances, mechanical strength of a fiber mat may increase as pore size decreases;
for example, a densified mat may have greater mechanical strength than a non-densified
mat of otherwise similar characteristics. Additionally, mats with smaller pore sizes
may be less permeable to biologic material, including less permeable to tissue ingrowth.
A fully dense serially deposited fiber mat may be considered impermeable to tissue
ingrowth and, for example, may be used as a tie layer configured to increase device
strength and/or reduce the permeability of a device (e.g., a stent graft) to tissue
and/or fluid.
[0140] In some exemplary embodiments, a serially deposited fiber mat may be densified by
heating and compressing the fiber mat using point pressure. In some instances the
heat and pressure may be applied until the fiber structure is no longer present. In
some instances, pressure and heat applied by a soldering iron to a fiber mat may be
used to densify the fiber mat. The soldering iron may be heated to 700° F and the
fiber mat may be compressed between the soldering iron and a mandrel. In some instances,
the mandrel may be rotated during densification, to facilitate creation of densified
rings on tubular mats. Serially deposited fiber mats may also be densified by disposing
a mat between two flat plates which may be pressed together (e.g., by clamping) and/or
heated. Serially deposited fiber mats may also or alternatively be processed through
opposing rollers, such as calendaring rollers.
[0141] In some embodiments a stent graft or other tubular appliance may be configured with
scalloped ends. In other words, an end of a tubular member may comprise cut-away portions
around a circumference of the tubular member at the scalloped end. Scalloped ends
may be configured to reduce infolding of the stent cover at the ends. For example,
in some instances, a stent may have a larger diameter than a vessel in which it is
deployed. Thus, the vessel may partially compress the stent radially. In some instances
this radial compression may create folds or wrinkles in flat cut stent covers. These
folds may then impede blood flow or lead to clotting within the vessel. Scalloped
ends may reduce the occurrence of infolding at the end of a radially compressed stent.
Additionally, scalloped ends may further provide a transition zone between a body
lumen and a stent graft or other appliance. This transition zone may be less traumatic
than a sharp transition. Use of scalloped ends may reduce the occurrence of edge stenosis
in connection with implantable medical devices. Use of scalloped ends is further referenced
in
U.S. Patent Application No. 13/742,025, filed on January 15, 2013, and titled "Rotational Spun Material Covered Medical Appliances and Methods of Manufacture,"
which is incorporated by reference in its entirety, as noted above.
[0142] As referenced above, various serially deposited fiber mats may be constructed in
various ways. For example, in some exemplary embodiments, a serially deposited fiber
mat may be fabricated as described below. This description is exemplary and not intended
to indicate that all rotational spun fiber mats must be fabricated according to the
exemplary parameters disclosed.
[0143] In some embodiments a rotational spun fiber mat may be fabricated by first mixing
50 wt% to 70 wt%, including 60 wt%, PTFE water dispersion with PEO and water to create
a 0.05 g to 0.11 g-including 0.06 g to 0.08 g, and 0.07 g-PEO/ml total mixture. The
mixture may then be mixed, for example, in a jar roller. In some embodiments the mixture
may be mixed in the jar roller for from two to eight days, including for seven days.
The mixture may then be filtered to remove any inconsistencies. In some examples,
filtration by a 1-10 µm filter, including by a 5 µm filter, may remove such inconsistencies.
The filtered mixture may then be fed, including embodiments wherein the mixture is
continuously fed, into the rotating head of a rotational spinning apparatus. In some
embodiments, the material may be fed at about 0.5 ml per minute to about 2 ml per
minute, including about 1 ml per minute, into the rotating head. The rotational spinning
head may then be operated between 4,500 RPM and 10,000 RPM, including between 5,000
RPM and 8,500 RPM, to rotational spin fibers from the mixture. In some instances the
fibers may be collected on rotating mandrels, including mandrels rotating between
20 RPM and 300 RPM or mandrels rotating between 20 RPM and 10,000 RPM, including between
1,000 RPM and 10,000 RPM. Depending on desired mat thickness, the operation may be
shortened or extended, though in some embodiments fibers may be spun for between 1
minute and 10 minutes, including between 2 minutes and 5 minutes. After spinning,
the mandrels and deposited fibers may be heated to a temperature between 370°C and
400° C, including a temperature of 385°C (for example, by placing them in an oven
at that temperature) for 5-25 minutes to sinter PTFE fibers and remove the PEO and
water by evaporation.
[0144] As also referenced above, sintered serially deposited fibers may be post-processed,
including processing by heating and stretching the fiber mat. In some instances, heating
and stretching may tend to align the fibers of the fiber mat. Continuing the exemplary
process detailed above, after sintering, a serially deposited PTFE fiber mat may then
be reheated at temperatures between 285° C and 385°C, then stretched while the mat
remains at temperature. The mat may then be cooled while maintaining the stretched
length. In some instances mats may be stretched to between 1.5 and 3.5 times or more
the original length of the mat. As with the description of rotational spinning of
fibers, this description is exemplary and not intended to indicate that all stretched
fiber mats must be stretched according to the exemplary parameters disclosed.
[0145] The characteristics and modes of describing serially deposited fiber mats as disclosed
herein are not mutually exclusive. For example, it is within the scope of this disclosure
to describe a fiber mat in terms of both its average pore size and the number of intersections
or branches per unit area of the serially deposited fiber mat. The following examples
represent exemplary embodiments and are intended only as examples and not to limit
this disclosure in any way. Additionally, the exemplary embodiments below represent
various exemplary combinations of features of fiber mats and devices. These embodiments
are exemplary, not exhaustive.
[0146] Serially deposited fiber coatings or layers may further be configured as drug-eluting
layers. In other words, a serially deposited fiber mat may incorporate a drug or other
therapeutic agent and/or may control the release of a drug or other therapeutic agent.
For example, in some embodiments, a drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat may
comprise a therapeutic agent that has been incorporated into the serially deposited
fiber mat. In certain embodiments, the therapeutic agent can be mixed with a solution
of flowable material before it is serially deposited. In such embodiments, the therapeutic
agent may be mixed with a solution of flowable material comprising, for example, one
or more dispersions, carrier solutions, suspensions, liquids, molten or semi-molten
materials, or other fluid or semi-fluid material. In one such embodiment, the therapeutic
agent is mixed with a carrier solution and is then serially deposited onto a medical
device, thereby providing a therapeutic agent associated with the serially deposited
fibers.
[0147] In other embodiments, the drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mats comprise a therapeutic
agent that has been applied to the serially deposited fiber mat after the mat has
been applied to a medical device or collector. The therapeutic agent can be, for example,
sprayed or painted onto the serially deposited fiber mat. In some embodiments, the
serially deposited fiber mat can be dipped or rolled in the therapeutic agent. In
certain embodiments, the therapeutic agent is associated with the drug-eluting serially
deposited fiber mat during the deposition of the fibers. In other embodiments, the
therapeutic agent is associated with the drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat
subsequent to the deposition of the fibers.
[0148] In certain embodiments, the therapeutic agent may be selected from at least one of
paclitaxel, rapamycin, beta-lapachone, vitamin D, a bismuth-containing compound, heparin,
iopromide or other contrast agent; analogs of any of the foregoing; and mixtures thereof.
In some embodiments, the therapeutic agent is selected from at least one of rapamycin,
paclitaxel, a bismuth-containing compound, heparin, and analogs of any of the foregoing.
In other embodiments, the therapeutic agent may be present in combination with a second
therapeutic agent. For example, the therapeutic agent is at least one of paclitaxel,
rapamycin, heparin, and analogs thereof, and the second therapeutic agent is at least
one of beta-lapachone, vitamin D, and their analogs. In further embodiments, the therapeutic
agent may be selected from at least one of rapamycin (also known as sirolimus), fujimycin
(also known as tacrolimus), umirolimus, an antibiotic, an antifungal agent, an autophagy
activator, an enzyme, an enzyme inhibitor, a protein including an antibody, an immunoregulator,
a kinase, and a phosphatase. In still further embodiments, the therapeutic agent may
include one or more steroids, immunosuppressants, anti-proliferatives, proliferatives,
anti-infectives, anti-thrombotics, thrombotics, nutritional additives, prophylactics,
or preventative agents. In an embodiment, the therapeutic agent is dexamethasone.
In further embodiments, the therapeutic agent may be a cell or mixture of cells, for
example, for use in skin grafts, tissue engineering, bone regrowth, or similar prosthetic
indications. The therapeutic agent may be present in a salt form or as a prodrug.
[0149] In some embodiments, a serially deposited fiber mat disposed on a medical device
can increase the polymeric surface area of the medical device, which may improve the
delivery of the associated therapeutic agent to a target tissue. Without being bound
by theory, the additional surface area provided by the serially deposited fiber mat
may increase the contact area between the drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat
on the medical device and a target tissue and/or biological fluid. For certain embodiments
described herein, the release rate of the therapeutic agent may be generally proportional
to the surface area of the drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat on the medical
device. In other embodiments, the increased surface area created by the serially deposited
fiber mat may increase the rate of delivery of the therapeutic agent.
[0150] In certain embodiments, a drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat may allow for
a controlled release, such as an immediate release, of an effective dose of a therapeutic
agent to a target tissue. In particular embodiments, a drug-eluting serially deposited
fiber mat may allow for the relatively rapid release of an effective dose of a therapeutic
agent to a target tissue in approximately 5 minutes or less. In some embodiments,
the drug-eluting serially deposited fiber mat may allow for the controlled release
of an effective dose of a therapeutic agent to a target tissue in approximately 5
minutes or less, 4 minutes or less, 3 minutes or less, 2.5 minutes or less, 2 minutes
or less, 1.8 minutes or less, 1.6 minutes or less, 1.4 minutes or less, 1.2 minutes
or less, 1 minute or less, 0.9 minutes or less, 0.8 minutes or less, 0.7 minutes or
less, 0.6 minutes or less, 0.5 minutes or less, 0.4 minutes or less, 0.3 minutes or
less, 0.2 minutes or less, or 0.1 minutes or less.
[0151] In other embodiments the increased surface area created by a serially deposited fiber
mat may increase the bioavailability of a therapeutic agent. Without being bound by
theory, the increased surface area may provide for a more efficient release of a therapeutic
agent and an increased drug absorption by the target tissue. In such embodiments,
increased surface area can allow for a reduction in the amount of therapeutic agent
that is used to deliver an effective dose, in comparison to the amount used without
a serially deposited fiber mat coating. In certain such embodiments, the increased
surface area may allow an effective dose of therapeutic agent to be delivered to the
target tissue while using approximately less than 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%,
80%, or 90% of the therapeutic agent used without the presence of a drug-eluting serially
deposited fiber mat on the medical device.
[0152] In certain embodiments of the medical devices disclosed herein, the surface area
of a serially deposited fiber mat may be adjusted by increasing or decreasing the
density or fiber size of the serially deposited fiber mat. In other embodiments, a
medical device may be coated with one or more layers of serially deposited fibers
wherein the various layers may be in different orientations relative to each other.
In some embodiments, the surface area of the serially deposited fiber mat may be adjusted
in order to control the delivery rate of the associated therapeutic agent. In some
embodiments, the serially deposited fiber layers can be coupled with non-serially
deposited layers, including, for example, sheets, films, and tubes of other polymeric
or biological materials. Drug elution in serially deposited fiber mats is further
discussed in
United States Patent Application No. 13/787,327, titled "Drug-Eluting Rotational Spun
Coatings and Methods of Use," filed on March 6, 2013 and herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Example 5.1
[0153] The generally random fiber mat of Figure 18 was produced as follows. A 60 wt% PTFE
water dispersion was mixed with PEO to obtain a .07 g/ml mixture of PEO to PTFE dispersion.
The mixture was strained through a filter to remove any large particles. The combined
solution was then allowed to sit and/or was mixed in a non-agitating jar roller until
the solution achieved homogeneity. The combined solution was then rotational spun
from a spinneret at about 3,500 RPM and collected. The orifices on the spinneret were
about 27 gauge openings. The mat was then sintered at about 385°C.
Example 5.2
[0154] The generally aligned fiber mat of Figure 19 was produced by creating a random fiber
mat according to the same parameters recited in Example 5.1. The fiber mat was then
heated at a temperature of 385° C and stretched to 3.5 times its original length.
[0155] The more aligned disposition of the fibers of the mat of Example 5.2, as compared
to the fiber mat of Example 5.1, is shown in Figures 18 and 19.
Example 5.3
[0156] The densified fiber mat of Figure 22 was produced by creating a random fiber mat
with similar parameters to those recited in Example 5.1. After sintering and initial
cooling, the fibers were then heated and compressed by applying a soldering iron heated
to 700° F to the fiber mat. The fiber mat was disposed on a rotating mandrel as the
heat and pressure were applied. The soldering iron was traversed axially back and
forth along the tube until a portion (-10 cm) of the fiber mat was densified. The
change in fiber distinction and structure between an undensified mat, such as described
in Examples 5.1 and 5.2, and the densified mat of Example 5.3 is shown in Figures
18, 19, and 22.
Exemplary Embodiments
I. Method of Manufacture
[0157] In one embodiment, a method of manufacturing a polymeric material comprises obtaining
a membrane comprising a mat of sintered polymeric fibers and stretching the membrane
in a first direction to at least partially elongate the membrane in the first direction.
[0158] The membrane may be heated and stretched while the membrane is at an elevated temperature.
[0159] Obtaining the membrane may comprise serially depositing the polymeric fibers on a
collection apparatus to form a membrane and sintering the membrane to set the structure
of the fibers.
[0160] The polymeric fibers may be serially deposited by rotational spinning the polymeric
fibers onto the collection apparatus.
[0161] The polymeric fibers may be serially deposited by electrospinning the polymeric fibers
onto the collection apparatus.
[0162] Heating the membrane may comprise the same step as sintering the membrane.
[0163] Heating the membrane may comprise a separate step from sintering the membrane.
[0164] The polymeric fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0165] The membrane may be sintered at about 150° C or more.
[0166] The membrane may be sintered at about 200° C or more.
[0167] The membrane may be sintered at about 250° C or more.
[0168] The membrane may be sintered at about 300° C or more.
[0169] The membrane may be sintered at about 350° C or more.
[0170] The membrane may be sintered at about 370° C or more.
[0171] The membrane may be sintered at about 385° C or more.
[0172] The membrane may be heated to at least the crystalline melt temperature of the polymeric
fibers.
[0173] The membrane may be stretched such that the polymeric fibers tend to align in the
first direction.
[0174] The membrane may be stretched to at least 150% of its original length in the first
direction.
[0175] The membrane may be stretched to at least 200% of its original length in the first
direction.
[0176] The membrane may be stretched to at least 250% of its original length in the first
direction.
[0177] The membrane may be stretched to at least 300% of its original length in the first
direction.
[0178] The membrane may be stretched to at least 350% of its original length in the first
direction.
[0179] The membrane may be twisted to entangle the fibers before the membrane is sintered.
[0180] Stretching the membrane may increase the resistance of the membrane to creep in the
first direction.
[0181] The membrane may be stretched in a second direction while the membrane is at an elevated
temperature to at least partially elongate the membrane in the second direction.
[0182] The membrane may be simultaneously stretched in the first and second directions while
the membrane is at an elevated temperature.
[0183] Stretching the membrane in a first direction and a second direction may increase
the resistance of the membrane to creep in the first direction and in the second direction.
[0184] Stretching the membrane may reduce the thickness of the membrane.
[0185] Stretching the membrane may reduce the thickness of the membrane between 10% and
90%.
[0186] The stretched membrane may be coupled to a second polymeric layer.
[0187] The stretched membrane may be coupled to a second polymeric layer and a third polymeric
layer.
[0188] The second polymeric layer may be disposed between the membrane and the third polymeric
layer and bond to both the membrane and the third polymeric layer.
[0189] The second polymeric layer may comprise fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP).
[0190] The third polymeric layer may comprise a serially deposited PTFE fiber mat and the
polymeric fibers of the membrane may comprise PTFE.
[0191] The third polymeric layer may be sintered then heated and stretched.
[0192] The second polymeric layer may comprise expanded PTFE.
II. Polymeric Material
[0193] In one embodiment, a polymeric material comprises a membrane that is comprised of
serially deposited polymeric fibers that have been stretched in a first direction
after the fibers have been serially deposited.
[0194] The polymeric fibers may be rotational spun polymeric fibers.
[0195] The polymeric fibers may be electrospun polymeric fibers.
[0196] The fibers may comprise sintered fibers prior to being stretched.
[0197] The fibers may be set in a stretched configuration from exposure to an elevated temperature.
[0198] The fibers may be stretched at a temperature at or above the crystalline melting
point of the polymeric material.
[0199] The fiber membrane may be at least 150% of its original length in the first direction
upon stretching.
[0200] The fiber membrane may be at least 300% of its original length in the first direction
upon stretching.
[0201] The fibers may be generally aligned in the first direction.
[0202] The polymeric material may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0203] The membrane may be more resistant to creep in the first direction after the membrane
is stretched.
[0204] The membrane may be more resistant to creep in the first direction than in a second
direction oriented perpendicular to the first direction.
[0205] The serially deposited polymeric fibers may have been stretched in a second direction.
[0206] The membrane may be more resistant to creep in the first and second directions after
the membrane is stretched.
[0207] The polymeric material may further comprise a second polymeric layer.
[0208] The polymeric material may further comprise a third polymeric layer.
[0209] The second polymeric layer may be disposed between the membrane and the third polymeric
layer and the second polymeric layer may bond to both the membrane and the third polymeric
layer.
[0210] The second polymeric layer may comprise fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP).
[0211] The third material layer may comprise a serially deposited PTFE fiber mat and the
polymeric fibers of the membrane may comprise PTFE.
[0212] The third material layer may have been sintered then heated and stretched.
[0213] The second polymeric layer may comprise expanded PTFE.
[0214] The polymeric material may further comprise a reinforcing member selected from at
least one of: Nitinol, stainless steel, chromium cobalt (MP35N), or titanium.
[0215] One or more of the second polymeric layer and the membrane may be configured to be
blood contacting.
III. Method of Resisting Creep in a Medical Appliance
[0216] An embodiment of a method of resisting creep in a medical appliance may comprise
obtaining a medical appliance comprised of serially deposited and sintered polymeric
fibers, heating the medical appliance at an elevated temperature, and stretching the
medical appliance in a first direction such that the medical appliance is more resistant
to creep in the first direction after stretching.
[0217] The serially deposited and sintered polymeric fibers may be rotational spun.
[0218] The serially deposited and sintered polymeric fibers may be electrospun.
[0219] The serially deposited and sintered polymeric fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE).
[0220] The medical appliance may further comprise a tubular member and the first direction
may be in an axial direction of the tubular member.
[0221] The medical appliance may further comprise a tubular member and the first direction
may be in a radial direction of the tubular member.
[0222] Stretching the medical appliance may comprise stretching the medical appliance to
between 150% and 350% of its original length in the first direction.
[0223] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular graft.
[0224] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
IV. Method of Setting a Geometry of a Polymeric Material
[0225] In one embodiment, a method of setting a geometry of a polymeric material comprises
obtaining a polymeric membrane comprising a mat or serially deposited polymeric fibers,
constraining the polymeric membrane into a desired geometry, and heating the polymeric
membrane while constrained.
[0226] Obtaining the polymeric membrane may comprise obtaining a sintered polymeric membrane.
[0227] Heating the polymeric membrane may comprise heating the polymeric membrane to a temperature
lower than a temperature at which the polymeric membrane was sintered.
[0228] Heating the polymeric membrane may comprise heating the polymeric membrane at a temperature
at or above the crystalline melt temperature of the polymeric material.
[0229] The polymeric membrane may comprise a tubular membrane of serially deposited polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE) fibers.
[0230] The PTFE fibers may be rotational spun fibers.
[0231] The PTFE fibers may be electrospun fibers.
[0232] The tubular membrane may be stretched in an axial direction prior to constraining
the tubular membrane.
[0233] The polymeric membrane may be constrained by axially compressing the tubular membrane
onto a mandrel to form a corrugated tube.
[0234] Heating the polymeric membrane may comprise heating the polymeric membrane at about
325° C or more.
[0235] The sintered polymeric membrane may be heated at an elevated temperature and stretched
to at least 150% of the original length of the sintered polymeric membrane before
the membrane is constrained.
V. Tubular Graft
[0236] In one embodiment, a tubular graft may comprise a tube of serially deposited polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE) fibers and the tube may be heat-set in an axially compressed state such that
the tube has a generally corrugated shape.
[0237] The serially deposited PTFE fibers may be rotational spun fibers.
[0238] The serially deposited PTFE fibers may be electrospun fibers.
[0239] The tube may be heat-set after the tube is initially sintered.
[0240] A smooth walled tube may be coupled to the corrugated tube of the tubular graft such
that the smooth walled tube is coaxial with and overlaps the corrugated tube.
[0241] The smooth walled tube may define an inside diameter of the tubular graft, and the
corrugated tube may define an outside diameter of the corrugated graft.
[0242] The smooth walled tube may be configured to be blood contacting.
[0243] The tube may have been heated at an elevated temperature and stretched to at least
150% of the original length of the tube after the tube has been sintered and before
the tube is heat-set.
VI. Reinforced Tubular Graft
[0244] In one embodiment, a reinforced tubular graft comprises a first layer that comprises
a first mat of serially deposited polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) fibers, and one or
more reinforcing rings disposed around the first layer.
[0245] The reinforcing rings may comprise rings of fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP)
disposed around the first layer.
[0246] A second layer that comprises a second mat of serially deposited PTFE fibers may
be disposed over the reinforcing rings.
[0247] The one or more reinforcing rings may be removable by a practitioner.
[0248] The one or more reinforcing rings may be configured to resist kinking.
[0249] One or more of the first and second layers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0250] One or more of the first and second layers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0251] The reinforcing rings may comprise densified regions of the first layer.
[0252] The densified regions may comprise segments of the first layer densified by heating
and compression.
[0253] The reinforcing rings may comprise corrugations formed in the first layer.
[0254] The first layer may be heat-set in a corrugated configuration.
[0255] The first layer may be configured to be blood contacting.
VII. Method of Suturing a Medical Appliance
[0256] In one embodiment, a method of suturing a medical appliance comprises pulling a suture
through a mat of serially deposited polymeric fibers.
[0257] The serially deposited polymeric fibers may be rotational spun fibers.
[0258] The serially deposited polymeric fibers may be electrospun fibers.
VIII. Mat of Polymeric Fibers that Elastically Recoil
[0259] In one embodiment, a mat comprises serially deposited polymeric fibers that are configured
to elastically recoil after an instrument pierces the mat to resist fluid leakage
through the mat.
[0260] The fibers may be configured to elastically recoil around a suture disposed in the
mat.
[0261] The serially deposited polymeric fibers may be rotational spun fibers.
[0262] The serially deposited polymeric fibers may be electrospun fibers.
IX. Artificial Joint(s)
[0263] In one embodiment, an artificial joint comprises a base component and a layer of
serially deposited polymeric fibers disposed on a surface of the base component.
[0264] The layer of serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0265] The layer of serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0266] The joint may comprise a hip implant.
[0267] The joint may comprise a knee implant.
[0268] The layer of serially deposited polymeric fibers may be disposed such that it interacts
with an artificial component that is separate from the base component and configured
to move with respect to the base component.
[0269] The layer of serially deposited polymeric fibers may be disposed such that it interacts
with a biologic structure which moves with respect to the base component.
[0270] The layer may have a different coefficient of friction than the surface of the base
component.
X. Coated Catheter
[0271] In one embodiment, a catheter comprises a base structure and a coating that comprises
a mat of serially deposited polymeric fibers and is disposed on a portion of the base
structure.
[0272] The mat of serially deposited polymeric fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0273] The mat of serially deposited polymeric fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0274] The coating may have a different hydrophobicity than the surface of the base structure.
[0275] The coating may have a different coefficient of friction than the surface of the
base structure.
XI. Implantable Medical Appliance
[0276] In one embodiment, an implantable medical appliance comprises a structure that comprises
serially deposited ceramic fibers.
[0277] The serially deposited ceramic fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0278] The serially deposited ceramic fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0279] The structure may be porous and configured for use as a scaffold for bone growth.
[0280] The structure may comprise a prosthetic vertebrae.
XII. Method of Promoting Bone Growth on a Lattice Structure
[0281] In one embodiment, a method of promoting bone growth on a lattice structure comprises
obtaining a lattice structure comprising serially deposited fibers and implanting
the lattice structure into a body such that the lattice structure is disposed adjacent
a structure of a skeletal system of the body.
[0282] The lattice structure may comprise serially deposited ceramic fibers.
[0283] The serially deposited fibers may be rotational spun.
[0284] The serially deposited fibers may be electrospun.
XIII. Fiber Diameter
[0285] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises serially deposited fibers
in which 95% of the fiber diameters are from 50 nm to 6 µm.
[0286] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0287] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0288] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0289] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0290] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0291] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 nm to 800 µm thick.
[0292] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0293] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0294] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0295] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0296] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0297] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0298] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0299] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0300] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0301] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0302] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0303] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0304] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0305] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0306] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0307] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0308] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0309] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0310] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0311] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0312] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0313] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0314] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0315] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0316] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0317] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0318] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0319] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0320] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0321] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XIV. Mat Thickness
[0322] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat from 50 nm to 800
µm thick.
[0323] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0324] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0325] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0326] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0327] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0328] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0329] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0330] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0331] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0332] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0333] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0334] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0335] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0336] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0337] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0338] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0339] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0340] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0341] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0342] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0343] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0344] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0345] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0346] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0347] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0348] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0349] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0350] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0351] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0352] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0353] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0354] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0355] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0356] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0357] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0358] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XV. Fiber Density
[0359] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises fibers having an average
fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000 fibers per mm
2.
[0360] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0361] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0362] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0363] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0364] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0365] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0366] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0367] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0368] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0369] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0370] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0371] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0372] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0373] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0374] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0375] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0376] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0377] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0378] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0379] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0380] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0381] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0382] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0383] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0384] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0385] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0386] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0387] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0388] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0389] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0390] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0391] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0392] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0393] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0394] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0395] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XVI. Pore Diameter
[0396] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat wherein the effective
diameters of at least 50 randomly identified pores collectively average from 1 µm
to 10 µm.
[0397] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0398] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0399] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0400] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0401] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0402] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0403] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0404] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0405] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0406] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0407] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0408] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0409] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0410] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0411] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0412] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0413] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0414] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0415] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0416] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0417] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0418] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0419] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0420] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0421] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0422] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0423] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0424] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0425] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0426] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0427] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0428] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0429] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0430] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0431] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0432] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XVII. Intersections
[0433] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat having between
100 and 100,000 intersections per mm
2.
[0434] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0435] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0436] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0437] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0438] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0439] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0440] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0441] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0442] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0443] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0444] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0445] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0446] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0447] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0448] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0449] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0450] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0451] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0452] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0453] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0454] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0455] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0456] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0457] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0458] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0459] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0460] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0461] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0462] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0463] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0464] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0465] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0466] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0467] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0468] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0469] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XVIII. Branches
[0470] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat having between
0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0471] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0472] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0473] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0474] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0475] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0476] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0477] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0478] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0479] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0480] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0481] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0482] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0483] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0484] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0485] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0486] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0487] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0488] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0489] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0490] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0491] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0492] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0493] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0494] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0495] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0496] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0497] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0498] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0499] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0500] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0501] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0502] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0503] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0504] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0505] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0506] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XIX. Bundles
[0507] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat having between
0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0508] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0509] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0510] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0511] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0512] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0513] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0514] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0515] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0516] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0517] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0518] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0519] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0520] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0521] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0522] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0523] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0524] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0525] No more than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0526] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0527] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0528] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0529] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0530] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0531] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0532] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0533] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0534] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0535] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0536] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0537] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0538] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0539] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0540] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0541] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0542] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0543] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XX. Random Angles
[0544] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat wherein no more
than 20% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections may fall
in a range of 10°.
[0545] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0546] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0547] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0548] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0549] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0550] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0551] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0552] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0553] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0554] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0555] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0556] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0557] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0558] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0559] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0560] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0561] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0562] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0563] No more than 15% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0564] No more than 10% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 10°.
[0565] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0566] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0567] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0568] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0569] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0570] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0571] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0572] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0573] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0574] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0575] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0576] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0577] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0578] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0579] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0580] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XXI. Aligned Angles 30° Range
[0581] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat wherein at least
25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections may fall in
a range of 30°.
[0582] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0583] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0584] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0585] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0586] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0587] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0588] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0589] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0590] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0591] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0592] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0593] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0594] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0595] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0596] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0597] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0598] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0599] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0600] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0601] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0602] At least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0603] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0604] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0605] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0606] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0607] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0608] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0609] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0610] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0611] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0612] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0613] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0614] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
XXII. Aligned Angles 40° Range
[0615] In one embodiment, a serially deposited fiber mat comprises a mat wherein at least
35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections may fall in
a range of 40°.
[0616] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 50 nm
to 6 µm.
[0617] The serially deposited fibers may comprise rotational spun fibers.
[0618] The serially deposited fibers may comprise electrospun fibers.
[0619] The serially deposited fibers may comprise polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
[0620] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 700
nm to 3 µm.
[0621] Ninety-five percent of the serially deposited fibers may have diameters from 900
nm to 2 µm.
[0622] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 800 µm thick.
[0623] The serially deposited fiber mat may be from 50 µm to 200 µm thick.
[0624] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0625] The serially deposited fibers may have an average fiber density from 12,000 to 55,000
fibers per mm
2.
[0626] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 1 µm to 10 µm.
[0627] At least 50 randomly identified pores in the serially deposited fiber mat may have
effective diameters that collectively average from 2 µm to 3.5 µm.
[0628] The serially deposited fibers may define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0629] The serially deposited fibers may define between 4,000 and 65,000 intersections per
mm
2.
[0630] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm
2.
[0631] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 7,500 branches per mm
2.
[0632] The serially deposited fibers may define between 0 and 30,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0633] The serially deposited fibers may define between 400 and 10,000 bundles per mm
2.
[0634] At least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0635] At least 30% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0636] At least 40% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 30°.
[0637] At least 50% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0638] At least 55% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections
may fall in a range of 40°.
[0639] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a layer of a multilayered construct.
[0640] The multilayered construct may comprise an impermeable layer.
[0641] The multilayered construct may be wholly comprised of PTFE.
[0642] The multilayered construct may comprise only serially deposited PTFE.
[0643] The multilayered construct may comprise no layers of ePTFE.
[0644] The serially deposited fiber mat may comprise a portion of a medical appliance.
[0645] The medical appliance may comprise a stent graft.
[0646] The medical appliance may comprise a graft.
[0647] The medical appliance may comprise a patch.
[0648] The medical appliance may comprise a vascular prosthesis.
[0649] The examples and embodiments disclosed herein are to be construed as merely illustrative
and exemplary, and not as a limitation of the scope of the present disclosure in any
way. It will be apparent to those having skill in the art with the aid of the present
disclosure that changes may be made to the details of the above-described embodiments
without departing from the underlying principles of the disclosure herein. It is intended
that the scope of the invention be defined by the statements appended hereto and their
equivalents.
The invention is further described in the following numbered statements:
Statement 1: A polymeric material comprising:
a membrane comprised of serially deposited polymeric fibers, the polymeric fibers
having been stretched in a first direction after the fibers are serially deposited.
Statement 2: The polymeric material of statement 1, wherein the fibers comprise sintered
fibers prior to being stretched.
Statement 3: The polymeric material of any of statements 1 and 2, wherein the fibers
are set in a stretched configuration through exposure to an elevated temperature.
Statement 4: The polymeric material of any of statements 1-3, wherein the fibers are
generally aligned in the first direction.
Statement 5:The polymeric material of any of statements 1-4, wherein the membrane
is more resistant to creep in the first direction after the membrane is stretched.
Statement 6: The polymeric material of any of statements 1-5, wherein the serially
deposited polymeric fibers have been stretched in a second direction.
Statement 7: A serially deposited fiber mat comprising a portion of a medical appliance,
the serially deposited fiber mat comprising:
serially deposited fibers wherein 95% of the fibers have diameters from 50 nm to 6
µm.
Statement 8: The serially deposited fiber mat of statement 7, wherein the serially
deposited fibers comprise one or more of rotational spun polytetrafluoroethylene fibers
and electrospun polytetrafluoroethylene fibers.
Statement 9: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7 and 8, wherein
95% of the serially deposited fibers have diameters from 700 nm to 3 µm.
Statement 10: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7-9, wherein the
fibers have an average fiber density from 5,000 to 150,000 fibers per mm2.
Statement 11: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7-10, wherein
the calculated effective diameters of 50 randomly identified pores collectively average
from 1 µm to 10 µm.
Statement 12: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statement 7-11, wherein the
fibers define between 100 and 100,000 intersections per mm2.
Statement 13: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7-13, wherein
the fibers define between 0 and 20,000 branches per mm2.
Statement 14: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7-13, wherein
at least 25% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections fall
in a range of 30°.
Statement 15: The serially deposited fiber mat of any of statements 7-14, wherein
at least 35% of the angles formed by fibers comprising branches or intersections fall
in a range of 40°.
Statement 16: A method of manufacturing a polymeric material comprising:
obtaining a membrane comprising a mat of sintered polymeric fibers; and
stretching the membrane in a first direction to at least partially elongate the membrane
in the first direction.
Statement 17: The method of statement 16, further comprising:
heating the membrane; and
wherein stretching the membrane comprises stretching the membrane while the membrane
is at an elevated temperature.
Statement 18: The method of any of statements 16 and 17, wherein obtaining the membrane
comprises:
serially depositing polymeric fibers on a collection apparatus to form a membrane;
and
sintering the membrane to set the structure of the fibers.
Statement 19: The method of statement 18, wherein the membrane is sintered at about
370° C or more.
Statement 20: The method of any of statements 17-19, wherein heating the membrane
comprises heating the membrane to at least the crystalline melt temperature of the
polymeric fibers.
Statement 21: The method of any of statements 16-20, wherein stretching the membrane
comprises stretching the membrane such that the polymeric fibers tend to align in
the first direction.
Statement 22: The method of any of statements 16-21, wherein stretching the membrane
comprises stretching the membrane to at least 150% of its original length in the first
direction.
Statement 23: The method of any of statements 16-22, further comprising stretching
the membrane in a second direction, while the membrane is at an elevated temperature,
to at least partially elongate the membrane in the second direction.
Statement 24: The method of any of statements 17-23, further comprising constraining
the polymeric membrane into a desired geometry, wherein heating the membrane comprises
heating the membrane while the polymeric membrane is constrained. Statement 25: The
method of any of statement 16-24, wherein obtaining a membrane comprising a mat of
sintered polymeric fibers comprises:
mixing a PTFE-water dispersion comprising from 50 wt% to 70 wt% PTFE with PEO to create
a mixture having from 0.05 to 0.11 g PEO/ml of total mixture;
rotational spinning the mixture between 4,500 RPM and 10,000 RPM;
collecting rotational spun fibers on a mandrel rotating between 20 RPM and 10,000
RPM; and
sintering the collected fibers at a temperature between 370 ° C and 400 ° C.
Statement 26: The method of statement 25, wherein sintering the collected fibers comprises
heating the fibers at a temperature between 370 ° C and 400 ° C for between 5 minutes
and 25 minutes.